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Gentlemen, I am here today with a painful feeling of incredulity. To me, it is incredible that I should be
speaking in the heart of New York, the greatest city in the world, to a group of distinguished
American businessman, over so magnificent a product of American technology as a television set,
on such a topic as capitalism versus communism—as if any comparison, issue or
choice between them were conceivable. On the one hand, we have the record of the greatest
achievements and the remnants of the noblest system ever created in the history of man.
On the other hand, we have a bloody slaughterhouse of ragged savages ruled by a blustering anthropoid,
inflated by our handouts, our lend-lease, our atomic secrets, our concessions, our compromises,
our self-betrayal. The world is being destroyed by a terrible conflict, but it is not the
conflict of capitalism versus communism. It is the conflict of capitalism versus itself,
with communism as the profiteer and the scavenger among the ruins who is advancing and winning
by default. Capitalism is in the process of committing suicide, and if we want to stop
that process, we must understand its reasons.
No political-economic system in history had proved its values so eloquently or had benefited
mankind so greatly as capitalism, and none has ever been attacked so savagely and blindly.
Why did the majority of intellectuals turn against capitalism from the start? Why did
their victims, the American businessmen, bear their attacks in silence? The cause of it
is a primordial evil which, to this day, men are afraid to challenge: the morality of altruism.
Altruism has been man’s ruling moral code through most of mankind’s history. It has
had many forms and variations, but its essence has always remained the same. Altruism holds
that man has no right to exist for his own sake, that service to others is the only justification
of his existence, and that self-sacrifice is his highest moral duty, virtue and value.
The conflict which since the Renaissance has been tearing Western civilization and which
has reached its ultimate climax in our age, is the conflict between capitalism and the
altruist morality.
Capitalism and altruism are philosophical opposites. They cannot coexist in the same
man or in the same society. The moral code which is implicit in capitalism had never
been formulated explicitly. The basic premise of that code is that man, every man, is an
end in himself, not the means to the ends of others—that man must exist for his own sake,
neither sacrificing himself to others nor sacrificing others to himself—and that men
must deal with one another as traders, by voluntary choice to mutual benefit.
This, in essence, is the moral premise on which the United States of America was based, the
principle of man’s right to his own life, to his own liberty, to the pursuit of his
own happiness.
This is what the intellectuals did not and could not choose to identify, so long as they
remained committed to the mystics’ morality of altruism. If the good, the virtuous, the
ideal is suffering and self-sacrifice, then by that standard capitalism has to be damned as evil.
Capitalism does not tell men to suffer but to pursue and enjoyment and achievement
here on earth. Capitalism does not tell men to serve and sacrifice but to produce and profit.
Capitalism does not preach passivity, humility, resignation but independence, self-confidence,
self-reliance. And above all, capitalism does not permit anyone to expect or demand to give
or to take the unearned. In all human relationships, private or public, spiritual or material,
social or political or economic or moral, capitalism requires that men be guided by
a principle which is the antithesis of altruism: the principle of justice.
So long as the intellectuals held altruism as their moral code, they had to evade the
actual nature and meaning of capitalism. They had to evade the fact that the source of industrial
wealth is man’s mind, that the fortunes made in a free economy are the product of
intelligence, of creative ability. This led them to the modern version of the ancient
soul-body dichotomy, to the contradiction of upholding the freedom of the mind while
denying it to the most active exponents of creative intelligence, the businessmen—the
contradiction of promising to liberate man’s mind by enslaving his body. It led them to
regard the businessman as a vulgar materialist and to regard themselves as some sort of elite,
born to rule him, to control his life and dispose of his product.
The shabby monument to this premise was the idea of divorcing production from distribution,
of assuming the right to distribute that which one has not produced. The only way to implement
an idea of that kind was the intellectuals’ alliance with the thug, with the advocate
of rule by brute force, the totalitarian collectivist. So long as the moral cannibalism of the altruist
code permits people to believe that it is virtuous and right to sacrifice some men for
the sake of others, they will reject capitalism as a system of selfish greed, and they will
cling to totalitarian statism of one kind or another, either communist or fascist or
Nazi or socialist or welfare. So long as men hold altruism as their moral code, terror,
slaughter, devastation and destruction is all they will or can achieve. Most people
still lack the courage to realize that capitalism—real, free, uncontrolled, unregulated laissez-faire
capitalism, not the mongrel mixed economy we have today—was the ideal social system
which mankind had almost achieved, then lost. They still lack the courage to realize that
if justice, progress, abundance, peace, safety and goodwill are their social goals, then
capitalism is the ideal to live for and fight for.
The truth which they refuse to face and to admit is that the world conflict of today
is the last stage of the struggle between capitalism and socialism, and that the whole
world knows it. The most helplessly ignorant shopkeeper on any corner of any street on
earth knows it in his own simple terms, though he is unable to discuss political theory.
Any illiterate peasant knows it in any Russian-occupied country when he dies, fighting in desperate
bewilderment for his right to his scraggly patch of soil. But our political and intellectual
leaders are the only ones who pretend not to see, and who go through the shabby ritual
of promising mankind free speech, free factories, and free lunches, all to come from the American
treasury, as if the masses of mankind were in fact the looting parasites of the socialist fancy.
If we do not fight for capitalism, we have nothing to fight for, nothing to uphold, nothing
to offer the world. We have no cause, no crusade, no moral justification. The hypocrisy of America’s
position in international affairs—the evasiveness, the guilty pretense, the apologies for the
greatest virtues of her system, implied in the avoidance of any mention of capitalism
as if it were the skeleton in her closet—have done more for the prestige of Soviet Russia
and for the growing spread of communism through the world then their own cheap bombastic propaganda
could ever accomplish.
The morality of altruism is Russia’s best and only weapon. Our attitude of moral guilt
is not becoming to the leader of a world crusade and will not rouse men to follow us.
And what do we ask men to fight for? They would join a crusade for freedom versus slavery,
which means for capitalism versus socialism. But who will care to fight in a crusade for
socialism versus communism? Who will want to fight and die to defend a system under
which he will have to do voluntarily, or rather by public vote, what a dictator would accomplish
faster and more thoroughly: the sacrifice of all to all? Who will want to crusade against
*** for the privilege of committing suicide?
I quote from my article, “Choose Your Issues,” in The Objectivist Newsletter which I publish:
“Neither a man nor a nation can have a practical policy without any basic principles to integrate it,
to set its goals and to guide its course. Just as the United States, having abandoned
its own principles, is floundering aimlessly in international affairs, is unable to act
and is merely reacting to the issues chosen and raised by Soviet Russia—so, in domestic
affairs, the conservatives are unable to act and are merely reacting to the issues chosen
and raised by the statists, thus accepting and helping to propagate the statists’ premises.
When the statists proclaim that their slave-system will achieve material prosperity, the conservatives
concede it and rush to urge people to sacrifice their materialistic concerns in order to preserve
freedom—thus helping the statists and their own audiences to evade the fact that only
freedom makes it possible for men to achieve material prosperity. When the statists announce
that our first duty is to support the entire population of the globe, the conservatives
rush into debates on whether Asia, Africa, or South America should be the first recipient
of our handouts. When certain statist groups, counting, apparently, on a total collapse
of American self-esteem, dare go so far as to urge America’s surrender into slavery
without a fight, under the slogan “Better Red Than Dead”—the conservatives rush
to proclaim that they prefer to be dead, thus helping to spread the idea that our only alternative
is communism or destruction, forgetting that the only proper answer to an ultimatum of
that kind is: “Better See the Reds Dead.”
In recent years, the conservatives have gradually come to a dim realization of the weakness
in their position, of the philosophical flaws that have to be corrected, but the means by
which they are attempting to correct it are worse than the original weakness. There are
three interrelated arguments used by today’s conservatives to justify capitalism, which
can best be designated as the argument from faith, the argument from tradition, the argument from depravity.
Sensing their need of a moral base, many conservatives decided to choose religion as their moral justification.
They are claiming that freedom, capitalism, and America are based on faith in God.
Politically, such a claim contradicts the fundamental principles of the United States.
In America, religion is a private matter and must not be brought into political issues.
Intellectually, to rest one’s case on faith is to concede that reason is on the side of
one’s enemies, to concede that there are no rational arguments to support the ideas
which created this country, no rational justification for freedom, justice, property, individual rights,
and they can be accepted only on faith. Consider the implications of that attempt.
While the communists are claiming that they are the champions of reason and science, the
conservatives concede it and retreat into the realm of mysticism, into another world,
surrendering this world to communism. It is the kind of victories that communists’ irrational
ideology could never have won on its own merits.
Now consider the second argument, the attempt to justify capitalism on the ground of tradition.
Some people declare that to be a conservative means to uphold the status quo, the given,
the established, regardless of what it might be, regardless of whether it is good or bad,
right or wrong, defensible or indefensible. They declare that we must defend the American
political system not because it is right but because our ancestors chose it, not because
it is good but because it is old. America was created by men who broke with all political
traditions and originated a system unprecedented in history, relying on nothing but the unaided
power of their own intellect. But those neoconservatives are now trying to tell us that America was
the product of faith in revealed truth and of uncritical respect for the traditions of
the past. It is certainly irrational to use the new as a standard of value, to believe
that an idea or a policy is good merely because it is new. But it is much more preposterously
irrational to use the old as a standard of value, to claim that an idea or a policy is
good merely because it is ancient. The liberals are constantly asserting that they represent
the future, that they are new, progressive, forward-looking, etc., and they denounce the
conservatives as old-fashioned representatives of a dead past. The conservatives concede
it and thus help the liberals to propagate one of today’s most grotesque contradictions.
Collectivism and dictatorship, the frozen-status society, is offered to us in the name of progress—while
capitalism, the only free, dynamic, creative society ever devised, is defended in the name
of passivity and stagnation. The plea to preserve tradition as such appeals to the worst elements
in man and rejects the best. It appeals to fear, cowardice, conformity, self-doubt, and
rejects creativeness, originality, independence, self-reliance. It is an outrageous plea to
address to human beings anywhere, but the more outrageous here in America, the country
based on the principle that man must stand on his own feet, live by his own judgment,
and move constantly forward as a productive, creative innovator.
This leads us to the third and the worst argument of some alleged conservatives, the attempt
to defend freedom on the ground of man’s depravity. This argument runs as follows:
since men are weak, fallible, non-omniscient, and innately depraved, no man may be entrusted
with the responsibility of being a dictator and of ruling everybody else. Therefore, a
free society is the proper way of life for imperfect creatures. Please grasp fully the
exact meaning of this argument. Since men are depraved, they are not good enough for a dictatorship.
Freedom is all that they deserve. If they were perfect, they would be worthy
of a totalitarian state. Dictatorship, this school asserts, believe it or not, is the
result of faith in man and in man’s goodness. If people realized that man is depraved by
nature, they would not entrust a dictator with power. The belief in human depravity
is what would protect their freedom. And more: dictatorships, this school declares, and all
the other disasters of the modern world are man’s punishment for the sin of relying
on his intellect and of attempting to improve his life on earth by seeking a perfect political
system and a rational society. Thus humility, passivity, resignation, and belief in Original Sin
are the bulwarks of capitalism. This is truly the voice of the Dark Ages rising again
in the midst of our industrial civilization. The liberals are trying to put statism over
by stealth, without letting the country realize what road they are taking to what ultimate goal.
And while such a policy is reprehensible, there is something much more reprehensible:
the policy of the so-called conservatives who believe in compromise and who are trying
to defend freedom by stealth. If the liberals are afraid to identify their program by its
proper name—if they advocate every specific step, measure, policy and principle of statism
but squirm and twist themselves into semantic pretzels with such euphemisms as the welfare state,
the New Deal, the New Frontier—they still preserve a semblance of logic if not
of morality. It is the logic of a con man who cannot afford to let his victims discover
his purpose. Besides, most liberals are afraid to let themselves discover that what they
advocate is statism. They do not want to know or to admit that they are the champions of
dictatorship and slavery. So they evade the issue for fear of discovering that their goal is evil.
Immoral as this might be, what is one to think of men who evade the issue for
fear of discovering that their goal is good? What is the moral stature of those who are
afraid to know or to proclaim that they are the champions of freedom? What is the courage
and the integrity of those who outdo their enemies in smearing, misrepresenting, spitting
at and apologizing for their own ideals? What is the rationality of those who expect to
trick people into freedom, cheat them into justice, fool them into progress, con them
into preserving their rights, and while indoctrinating them with statism, put one over on them and
let them wake up in a perfect capitalist society some morning? Such unfortunately are a great
many of today’s conservatives.
Gentlemen, if you want to save capitalism, there is only one type of argument that you
should adopt, the only one that has ever won in any moral issue: the argument from self-esteem.
Check your premises, convince yourself of the rightness of your cause, then fight for
capitalism with full moral certainty. I quote from my book, For the New Intellectual:
"The world crisis of today is a moral crisis—and nothing less than a moral revolution can resolve it:
a moral revolution to sanction and complete the political achievement of the American Revolution.
We must fight for capitalism, not as a ‘practical’ issue, not as an
economic issue, but, with the most righteous pride, as a moral issue. That is what capitalism
deserves, and nothing less will save it.”
I should like to suggest that you begin by applying to the realm of ideas the same objective,
logical, rational criteria of judgment that you apply to the realm of business.
You do not judge business issues by emotional standards; do not do it in regard to ideological issues.
You do not build factories by the guidance of your feelings; do not let your feelings
guide your political convictions. You do not count on men’s stupidity in business, you
do not put out an inferior product because people are too dumb to appreciate the best;
do not do it in political philosophy. Do not endorse or propagate ideas which you know
to be false, in a hope of appealing to people’s fears, prejudices, or ignorance. You do not
cheat people in business; do not try to do it in philosophy. The so-called common man
is uncommonly perceptive. You do not doubt your own judgment in business; do not doubt
it in the realm of ideology. Do not let the unintelligible gibberish of the liberal intellectuals
intimidate you or discourage you. Do not conclude “it must be deep because I don’t understand it,"
or “if this is what intellectual stuff is like, then all ideas are impractical nonsense."
Ideas are the greatest and most crucially practical power on earth.
You do not hire men as heads of your business departments without firsthand knowledge of the nature
of their jobs and of how to judge their performance; do not do it in regard to your public relations
department. Learn to judge whether the stuff they are selling you is poison or not.
You do not hire witch doctors as mechanics or engineers; do not hire them as PR’s.
Know how to tell your friends from your enemies. Know whom to support in philosophical and
political issues. If you are unable to speak freely, if you are bound and gagged by the
disgraceful injustice of such evils as the antitrust laws, at least do not praise, spread,
or support the philosophy of your own destroyers. Do not grant them the sanction of the victim.
Give some thought to the possibility of establishing a civil liberties union for businessmen.
And if you still wish to have a social mission or purpose, there is no greater service that
you can render mankind than by fighting for your own rights and property.
Businessmen are the one group that distinguishes capitalism and the American way of life from
the totalitarian statism that is swallowing the rest of the world. All the other social
groups—workers, professional men, scientists, soldiers—exist under dictatorships, even
though they exist in chains, in terror, in misery and in progressive self-destruction.
But there is no such group as businessmen under a dictatorship. Their place is taken
by armed thugs, by bureaucrats and commissars. Businessmen are the symbol of a free society,
the symbol of America. If and when you perish, civilization will perish. But you still have
a chance to save it if you accept the noble responsibility of your proper, moral self-interest
and announce it proudly to the hearing of the whole world, including the city of Washington.