Jewish Daily Forward
 
 
 
Is Ayn Rand’s Atheism An Inconvenient Truth?
By Josh Nathan-Kazis

Published June 08, 2011, issue of _June 17,  2011_ 
(http://www.forward.com/issues/2011-06-17/) .

Ayn Rand, novelist and conservative political thinker, has an impassioned  
following among some of today’s Republicans. They embrace her defense of  
laissez-faire capitalism and individualism. In many respects, she is the  
godmother of all libertarians. What some put aside, however, is the 
inconvenient 
 fact that she was also an outspoken atheist. 
 
  
Getty Images
Atheist: Rand, a Jewish-born novelist  and philosopher, was an outspoken 
critic of religion.


A group of left-leaning Christians have decided to make an issue of this  
disconnect, putting some leading Republicans on the spot about the woman they 
 think of as an intellectual hero. 
A new political ad, created by the faith-based advocacy group American 
Values  Network and provocatively titled “Ayn Rand & GOP vs. Jesus,” attempts 
to  drive a wedge into the Republican coalition by drawing attention to Rand’
s  anti-religious rhetoric. The ad is is directed primarily at Rep. Paul 
Ryan, the  Wisconsin Republican whose budget plan was championed by Republicans 
and decried  as overly austere by Democrats. 
And while observers say that efforts to use the admiration that Ryan and  
others have expressed for Rand to sow discontent in the party’s conservative  
Christian base will gain little traction, there are some signs that 
Democratic  groups like AVN are not the only religious Christians focusing on 
Rand. 
“Make no mistake: I have no love for big government. But there are far 
better  ways to critique it than Rand’s kind of godless nonsense, especially 
for 
 Christians,” said Chuck Colson, the prominent evangelical and former Nixon 
aide  and Watergate accomplice, in a video posted online a week before the 
appearance  of the anti-Ryan ad. “One thing is for certain: Though surely 
unintended,  today’s followers of Objectivism” — Rand’s philosophy — “are 
undermining the  gospel. Beware!” 
Rand, who died in 1982, was the author of the influential and deeply  
controversial political novels “The Fountainhead” and “Atlas Shrugged.” Born to 
 a Jewish family in St. Petersburg, Russia, she moved to the United States 
as a  young woman, becoming a novelist and later a philosopher. Rand argued 
for the  morality of capitalism, championing the notion of “rational 
self-interest” and  decrying altruism. Followers include Alan Greenspan, former 
chairman of the  Federal Reserve. 
Though Rand’s parents were Jewish, she herself was an avowed atheist. In a  
1979 interview with Phil Donahue on his daytime talk show, quoted in part 
in the  anti-Ryan ad, Rand said that she is “against God.” Religion, Rand 
argued, “gives  man permission to function irrationally, to accept something 
above and outside  the power of their reason.” 
The American Values Network’s ad plays quotes from Rand’s Donahue 
interview  and from another earlier interview with CBS’s Mike Wallace, in which 
she 
speaks  critically of religious faith. Those quotes are followed by praise 
for Rand  from, among others, Ryan, conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh and 
Senator Rand  Paul, a Kentucky Republican. 
The ad’s producers say that they are raising money to broadcast it in Ryan’
s  district. Ryan’s controversial budget plan proposed to slash the federal 
deficit  by making significant cuts to Medicare, among other programs. 
“I would argue that the Ryan budget is not in keeping with Christian  
principles,” said Eric Sapp, executive director of the American Values Network  
and a founding partner of the Eleison Group, a Democratic political messaging 
 firm. “What’s been going on for decades is this unholy alliance between  
Christians, libertarians and big business, who disagree about everything 
except  that they want power,” he said. 
Spokesmen for Ryan and Paul did not respond to messages left requesting  
comment on the ad. 
Though the ad’s producers hope to influence conservative Christians to  
question their place in the Republican coalition, some observers say the notion 
 that Republicans are anti-Christian will gain no traction with voters. 
“Look at the premise here: I’m supposed to believe that the Republican 
Party  is somehow weak on God and religion — the party that, as many would say, 
has too  closely embraced evangelicals, has dangerously lowered the wall 
between church  and state,” said Stuart Rothenberg, publisher of the 
nonpartisan,  Washington-based Rothenberg Political Report. “It’s not a 
credible 
attack.” 
Others say that Rand, though influential in certain circles, is too little  
known among Christian conservatives to create much of a rift. 
“The arcane intellectual debate to which they’re referring, and the 
somewhat  arcane protagonists, really won’t make a difference to any voters 
anywhere, in  my view,” said Mark Mellman, a Democratic pollster. 
But while some analysts call it unfair to hold Rand’s atheism against Ryan, 
 who has expressed admiration for Rand’s description of the moral 
dimensions of  capitalism, Mellman said that he does see strain in the 
coalition of 
business  people, the religious right and the ideological libertarians that 
have sustained  the Republican Party since the Reagan era. 
“There’s no question that there is a tension,” Mellman said. “But I think 
the  real issues are going to come in the course of the nomination process.”
 
Conservative Christians, whose numbers and organization give them a  
significant say in the Republican presidential nominations, may support  
candidates like Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, while the party’s business  
supporters may prefer a candidate like former Massachusetts governor Mitt  
Romney. 
Rothenberg, on the other hand, said that he saw relatively little tension  
among Republicans. “I’ve almost been surprised at how unanimous the 
Republican  chorus has been,” Rothenberg said. “You would think that… the 
Republicans  representing more moderate areas would be treading delicately, but 
everybody is  embracing the anti-tax, cutting the budget, cutting the deficit 
view that we’re  hearing from the party.” 
Meanwhile, some prominent Christians have begun to draw renewed attention 
to  Rand’s influence. Colson’s video comment on Rand was instigated by the 
April  release of a film version of “Atlas Shrugged.” 
“Not only should you stay away from the film, you should stay away from  
anyone who wants to see the film, unless their interest is ironic,” Colson  
said. 
Martin E. Marty, a prominent professor of the history of modern 
Christianity  at the University of Chicago Divinity School, has also written 
recently 
on Rand  and the acceptance of her ideas by some Christian conservatives. 
“I don’t know anybody, including the well-known circle of atheists, that 
has  been more overt, open and blunt in their denunciation of religion and 
also  Christianity,” Marty told the Forward. “That’s just a puzzle to me that 
it’s  just so overt, and yet they can sort of slice it out and say you can 
be selfish  all you want, but it has nothing to do with your faith.” 
Then there are those among Rand’s Christian opponents who think her appeal 
to  conservatives is more nefarious. 
“They say that the most so-called believers will be deceived by the  
antichrist, and I think that’s exactly what’s happening today,” said Gary 
Moore,  
an evangelical Lutheran writer and former Republican activist. “I’m not 
saying  she’s the antichrist, but she certainly aspired to be an  antichrist.”

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