(Due to popular demand, the system is often too busy to respond; so try
back often.  Right click playbacks to 'save target as...' to download
selections to your computer for replay later at your convenience and as
often as you want)



the Fountainhead (Download ONLY)
<http://txliberty.dyndns.org/inetpub/wwwroot/webfiles/FountainheadH.wmv>
Ayn Rand's study of a brilliant architect (Gary Cooper) whose integrity
allows no compromise in his work. Dominique: Patricia Neal. Wynand:
Raymond Massey. Keating: Kent Smith. Cameron: Henry Hull. Toohey: Robert
Douglas. Dean: Paul Stanton. Enright: Ray Collins. Directed by King
Vidor. (1949)
http://txliberty.dyndns.org/inetpub/wwwroot/webfiles/FountainheadH.wmv
<http://txliberty.dyndns.org/inetpub/wwwroot/webfiles/FountainheadH.wmv>




NOTE: if any of these LoRez internet playbacks stimulate your interest
in getting a clearer copy, please 'Google' that selection to locate a
legal source if one is not otherwise given already.          -Terry
Liberty Parker
AND Find More Free On-demand Playbacks On-line via
AustinLibertyInterNet Radio/TV
at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LibertyProspects/links
<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LibertyProspects/links>







--- In [email protected], "Victor Bozzo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
> Home | About | Columnists | Blog | Subscribe | Donate
>
>
> Why Integrity Matters
> by Butler Shaffer
> by Butler Shaffer
>
>
> DIGG THIS
>
> Two news stories arose in the same week, each illustrating the
significance of living one's life with integrity. The first involved
allegations that Republican Congressman Mark Foley had engaged in
explicit sexual e-mail conversations with teen-aged male pages. The
other informed us of the killing and wounding of a number of young Amish
children by a deranged man. In the mirror images of these events are
reflected both the pathological nature of our world, as well as a vision
of how a society might function when men and women live with principled
wholeness.
>
> By "integrity," I mean living one's life without contradiction or
moral confusion; being integrated - or centered - in thought and action;
expressing both spiritual and material values without conflict; and
having an uncomplicated mind with which to function, creatively, in a
complicated world.
>
> The reaction of the political establishment and its self-styled
opinion leaders to the Foley matter illustrates the utter lack of
integrity in political systems. Statists and a bamboozled public can
recite the virtues of "peace," "freedom," "protection of life and
property," "responsibility," and other life-sustaining qualities to be
sustained by the state while, at the same time, engaging in wars,
restraints on individual liberty, the killing and looting of
individuals, and acting without being accountable for the consequences
of their behavior.
>
> The state - which enjoys a legal monopoly on the use of violence -
does nothing more than steal people's property, force them to do what
they do not choose to do, and kill millions upon millions of persons
whom it is convenient to its interests to destroy in wars and genocides.
Such perversions - far more damaging to young people and to a nation
than are lewd e-mails - pass without criticism within the halls of
state, academia, or media studios. That so many of us continue to see
the political system as essential to "social order" reflects our
intellectual and spiritual bankruptcy, as well as providing testimony to
the remarkable effectiveness of the state's propaganda machinery.
>
> The state survives on our individualized lack of integrity. For most
of us, our thinking and emotions are in conflict; our principles are
muddled. It is our weaknesses that keep it strong. Not wanting to
confront the contradictions that lie within our unconscious minds, many
of us eagerly project our self-directed fears onto others, and demand
their punishment, a debilitating practice upon which the state depends
for its existence. Mr. Foley provides a vivid example of how this trait
corrupts all sense of integrity in both the individual and the political
institution. As a man with an apparent penchant for sexual conversations
with teen-aged boys over the Internet, he was Co-Chairman of the Missing
and Exploited Children Caucus, and authored legislation - "Internet
Crimes Against Children" - that may have criminalized his actions.
>
> The political establishment has circled the wagons against Mr. Foley,
treating his offense as sui generis. But his wrongs pale in comparison
with those regularly engaged in by virtually all members of congress and
the executive branch: including the use of outright lies, forgeries, and
other forms of deceit to fabricate conflicts with other nations. On the
basis of such intrinsic and pervasive dishonesty, the state sends young
men and women off to foreign countries to kill or maim innocent people,
and be killed or maimed themselves. The use of torture against anyone
the state deems "suspicious" is now widely accepted in Congress and,
apparently, among the general public. Such dishonest and destructive
acts continue with only token objection. But let someone direct
lascivious e-mail messages to teenagers and the forces of self-righteous
indignation are loosed.
>
> By contrast, if there is a sizeable community of people in America who
live with a more centered sense of wholeness than do the Amish, I have
not discovered it. I have long admired these people, and spend one class
session each year discussing them in my informal systems of order
seminar. One year, after a lengthy description and analysis of their
ways, one of my students asked whether it was possible for non-Amish
people to go live with them. "Why would you want to do so?," I inquired.
"Do you share their religious views, or have a desire to do farm work?
Are you prepared to live the austere lifestyle upon which they insist?"
>
> My student answered "no" to these questions, acknowledging that she
was too much of a Southern California person to make such a fundamental
change in how she would live. "So, what is so powerful about the Amish
that attracts you to the possibility of living amongst them?", I asked.
"Is there something about the integrity of their lives that you find so
compelling?" I then urged my students to explore the question of whether
there is a way of emulating the Amish system in a major urban setting.
>
> It is the integrity of the Amish that attracts most of us and makes us
want to defend their freedom to live as they do. Over the years, state
and federal governments have tried to force the Amish into their
coercive systems, such as government schools, Social Security, military
conscription, jury duty, etc. The Amish - consistent with their peaceful
ways - have always refused such participation. I recall, in the
mid-1960s, the efforts of one state school system to force Amish
children to attend government schools. A front-page newspaper photograph
was about as expressive of the contrast between these two cultures as
you could find: an armed sheriff's deputy chasing Amish children through
a cornfield in order to force them onto a school-bus. The scene was so
repugnant to any sense of human decency that even most Republicans and
Democrats insisted that the state drop its efforts. There seems to be a
widely-held sentiment in society - perhaps faint echoes from our dying
inner voices - that the Amish should be left alone.
>
> Those who wonder if it is possible for people to live in a condition
of anarchy need look no further than the example of the Amish. These
people refuse to have any dealings with the state - except for the taxes
they are forced to pay - and respect the inviolability of one another's
person or property interests. Their contracts with one another are
grounded in nothing more than mutual promises to perform. Their system
of protection and security is found in one another, not in institutions.
Anyone who deviates from Amish community standards need fear no jails,
fines, beatings, or confiscation of their property: the neighbors will
simply refuse to deal with them - to withhold their approval - until the
offender reforms.
>
> To the Amish, their work - particularly as farmers and carpenters - is
the worldly expression of their religious views. Unlike many of the rest
of us - whose divisive separation from our work is reflected in negative
bumper-stickers - the Amish find wholeness in their labors. Nor do the
Amish regard technology as an "evil"; they resist bringing anything into
their communities that will make them dependent on the outside world.
Thus, the automobile is not looked upon as the "work of the devil," but
as a tool which, if brought into their lives, will make them dependent
upon tire and parts manufacturers, oil companies, and the suppliers of
other auto necessities, the net effect of which would be to destroy
their system.
>
> The Amish community provides its members no more guarantees of
protection from hostile elements than does the dominant political
structure in America. Not unlike our experiences on 9/11, the Amish
world was terribly disrupted by the intrusion of a destructive force
from the outside. Though the innocent victims were at work in a humble
schoolhouse rather than towering skyscrapers, the Amish shared with
others the painful consequences of disturbed men from a deranged world
who could find only in their suicidal attacks the most effective
expression of their conflict-ridden madness.
>
> I doubt, however, that members of the Amish community will respond to
the slaughter of their children in the same way most Americans reacted
to 9/11. Even with the holes ripped into the fabric of their culture,
the Amish will be able to transcend these horrible events without
sacrificing the integrity upon which their lives are founded. They will
not put aside the principled nature of their society, but will find
comfort and energy within it. They have already demonstrated this.
>
> But for those of us who still struggle with the meaning and effects of
9/11, and who do so on the basis of principles and practices that are a
mass of confusion, conflict, and contradiction, our responses have
proven consistent with the normally neurotic - and often psychotic -
foundations upon which our social systems rest. Our alleged principles
and values - which have long found expression only as empty abstractions
rather than integrated into our sense of being - were among the first
unwanted cargo to be thrown overboard, lest they prove a hindrance to
the onrushing sea of fear and doubt in which we found ourselves. We
eagerly jettisoned our compasses as well, allowing the politically
ambitious to chart new directions for us, and obeying their urgings to
"stay the course" to wholly unknown destinations.
>
> The Amish will survive their pain, bruises, and broken hearts, but
they will do so intact. Their values will sustain them, while ours have
been lost in the darkness in which we live our lives. Such are the
pragmatic, real-world, "bottom line" contrasts - and consequences -
between living with and without integrity.
>
> Perhaps my seminar student was on the right track when she asked
whether it was possible to live in such a community as the Amish enjoy.
>
> October 10, 2006
>
> Butler Shaffer [send him e-mail] teaches at the Southwestern
University School of Law. He is the author of Calculated Chaos:
Institutional Threats to Peace and Human Survival.
>
> Copyright © 2006 LewRockwell.com
>
> Butler Shaffer Archives
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> Back to LewRockwell.com Home Page
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