הביתהתחרות הסיפור של איין ראנד 2022 סגנית שנייה: גילם גורגס טורנטחינוךאוניברסיטת אטלס
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תחרות הסיפור של איין ראנד 2022 סגנית שנייה: גילם גורגס טורנט

תחרות הסיפור של איין ראנד 2022 סגנית שנייה: גילם גורגס טורנט

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September 27, 2022

Two years ago, thanks to an algorithm for video recommendations that featured an old  interview, I was introduced to Ayn Rand's ideas. One might think that this was luck but, in fact, it was my personality and character traits that led the platform to recommend that content, so it was not entirely luck.

The philosophical relation between Ayn Rand and me has been present since I  was a young kid; only that I did not discover her until I was eighteen. My actions,  thoughts, and principles were so similar that I even wrote articles in a newsletter  before getting to know her with titles that were almost identical to those from The Virtue of Selfishness

As a kid, I attended a Christian school in my country, Spain. Corridors, walls, and  celebrations in the education center were full of animated quotes that I always  criticized as a kid. For example, the most popular displayed in the school were: 

"Love your brother as yourself" or "Give, without expecting anything back." All of  these quotes were backgrounded with images featuring poor environments and  mediocre cities. 

I always thought that the goals of these quotes were, in one word, impossible, because I couldn't understand loving or giving away indiscriminately. Unfortunately, years later, I  realized that not only corridors and walls were infected with these thoughts, the collectivist propaganda  eventually infected teachers' and students' minds. As well as promoting collectivization, these phrases became needed for supposed new rights, because the propagators felt that sacrificing themselves for others implored others to sacrifice for them. 

I had few—but very good—friends from school because I had always been aware of  the opportunities that living in society can give us. Living among others can be beneficial unless we put ourselves into a system that destroys individualism, encouraging and even forcing us to live for others or others to live for us. In order to express one of the  many ideals that I share with Ayn Rand, I will share a brief story that took place in the education center. 

When in school, at one point, I used to sell shampoos and bath gel to my  classmates that my father obtained in hotels when he traveled abroad. The  school reaction was to punish me by not going to the playground in my spare  time. They told me that earning money from other classmates was not moral, and  that I should not do it. It was only free trade that my mates and I engaged in, as we  were exchanging without using any kind of coercion. The same kind of people that share ideas from collectivist regimes worldwide stole, in little scale, my  freedom. 

Definitely, as I tried to explain in this brief essay, I wanted to express that Ayn  Rand was more than a philosopher to me, as she expressed many ideas that  were hidden in my personality, like a little match that struggles to keep lit in a  gloomy environment. She gave me the confirmation and strength that made me  understand that selling products in order to benefit myself was not anything bad,  that putting myself and my closest people above anyone else is correct, that I  should not expect anything from others nor others expect anything for me, and  finally, that there is a moral hazard surrounding us worth fighting for. 

Instead of inflating the collectivist pandemic, I am now encouraged to work hard  and efficiently to expand the pandemic of individualism and freedom.

גילם גורגס טורנט
About the author:
גילם גורגס טורנט

20 years old, from Spain. I study a degree in Psychology and a master in Austrian Economics. I am passionate about capitalism and the Austrian School of Economics. When it comes to Ayn Rand's philosophy, I describe my discovery of it as a discovery of very intrinsic values I always held since I was a kid.

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