"Galt" was trained as a physicist and a philosopher (he focused on physics), good-looking (I don't remember his "beauty" being a major point) and in apparently excellent physical condition, intellectually brilliant, and extraordinarily resolute. Perhaps we should stick to those attributes, and any others I might have left out. Oh, yeah: He also knew how to fly a small aircraft.
But APART from THAT, he's just like you and me.
Really, WW, don't you see how your own description of Galt shows him to be a self-parody? Even James Bond is a more realistic character than that.
Whether or not the misbehavior is "provable" is irrelevant to business: People won't do business with you if they find you out (and getting new, clueless customers is very expensive), even if you "get away with it" legally
But why should you care? You already made your millions illegally, so you don't really have to work anymore or find new customers. And you can rely on the public's short memory and count on the fact that, pretty soon, people will start doing business with you again--if you feel like working again for some reason, that is.
I say "unnecessary" because I don't have such a low opinion of myself to think that I'd need to take such a risk. Nor do I have the ability to lie, cheat, and steal, but only just once, and only in one respect.
But that's not the point of the example; I wasn't saying you actually would, or could, do something like that. The question is, what is MORALLY WRONG with stealing?
The objectivist, it seems to me, must say that what is MORALLY WRONG with it is that it just so happens NOT to be in his self-interest: that he simply lacks the ability to act in such a way, or that the risk of capture is almost always too great. Perhaps so; but that is not what is wrong with the act.
But let us, like Plato, assume you have certain superpowers. Suppose you have magic ring that lets you become invisible and therefore allows you to kill the old lady for her money with absolutely no risk of capture or detection. You are now running no risk at all in doing so, and you have $1,000,000 to gain if you do it.
Plato (and most people) would say that, even with no risk of capture, it is morally wrong to kill the old lady and take her money. The objectivist, I am afraid, has no choice but to admit that, in this case, it is not wrong to do so, since it's in one's self-interest.
As for politicians, they are a miserable lot in every sense of the word.
Oh
really? So why do so many people want to become politicians? Why do people run for president?
The issue of psychics, seers, and other quacks comes to mind, but I would argue that most of these people are among the self-deluded, not the cheats.
Let's take Sylvia Browne. It's rather obvious that
she is simply a fraud. Yet she knows it is extremely unlikely she will ever be prosecuted for fraud, and she enjoys living the high life--charging $700 per half-hour of "psychic" phone consultation.
Now, what is MORALLY WRONG with what she's doing, according to the objectist? She is making a lot more money than she could possibly dream of doing in an honest job, will never go to jail for her fraud, and is certainly maximizing her self-interest, that's for damn sure.
An objectivist, I am afraid, will have to admit there is nothing morally wrong with what she does.