epepke
Philosopher
- Joined
- Oct 22, 2003
- Messages
- 9,264
Let me make this simple enough for you to understand.
I appreciate your effort.
So: go ahead, epepke. Demonstrate that the conductor was doing his job, that he could not reasonably be expected to behave otherwise, and I will concede that example.
I do not assert that the conductor was doing his job, and nobody capable of a remote semblance of literacy, let alone rationality, could possibly conclude that I was.
What I am asserting is that, within the framework of the novel, that conductor was hired. Now, specious_reasons pointed out that he was hired by Dagny Taggart's brother. That's an actual variation from what I said. I don't consider it terribly important, because a family business is a family business. In any event, you did not choose this in challenging me, so I take this to mean that this is not the problem.
In any event, the Taggart family hired the conductor. And this means one of two things:
1) He was exactly what the Taggart family wanted, or
2) The Taggart family were complete fraking morons for hiring him.
Stop right there and think a bit. What I have written is completely accurate within the context of the book.
Ready?
I will go further. I think I know why they hired him. He was cheap. Being a moron, he probably couldn't get work elsewhere. They made an executive decision. When they went to board meetings or parties where they wore diamond tennis bracelets, they felt perfectly good about their decisions.
They didn't care, at all, about the effects of this moron conductor that they decided to hire, because otherwise, they would have fired him.
But then one of the principals of the company is inconvenienced, then it becomes an issue. And oh, now, it's a great philosophical issue. And it's all about whether he could be reasonably be expected to do his job. Damn him for not doing so!
But what about the jobs of the people who hired him? They didn't do their fraking jobs either.
Rand's answer seems to be that if you have a big enough dick and/or a haughty enough attitude and/or a nice tennis bracelet, unless you trade it for one of Reardon Metal, you can't be blamed for failing to do your damn job, at the very least inasmuch as it has to do with hiring decisions. It's Somebody Else's Problem(TM). Which is no different in any way at all from what Rand criticizes in underlings.
Hello? Is any of this getting through?
Last edited:
If that were your objection, then you should have pointed it out earlier. But let's see. How did Dagny and her brother come to have influence over the railroad? Was it meritocracy? Could he possibly have been put in charge of it because he was a descendent of the people who actually built it? No, of course not. Must have been fairies. Or the Pope. Yeah, that's it. The Pope. No human stupidity involved.