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Liberty Asheville’s Robert Malt smiles as Tim Peck makes a point in support of capitalism and the ideas of Ayn Rand. Malt is vice chairman of the Buncombe County GOP.
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From Daily Planet Staff Reports
In response to a $1 million donation by BB&T to Western Carolina University, tied to demands that included the addition of Ayn Rand’s “Atlas Shrugged” to WCU’s required reading list, several people at Firestorm Café in downtown Asheville recently held a two-night showing of a documentary on Ayn Rand titled “A Sense of Life.”
Each screening was followed by a discussion — sometimes heated — of Rand, her ideas and the possible flaws of capitalism.
Liberty Asheville member Tim Peck said he learned in advance of the program and convinced several backers of Rand’s ideas in particular, and free enterprise in general, to attend and offer a defense.
The screening, split over Jan. 12-13, was followed each night by group discussions.
More than 30 people attended on the first night, during which
the Daily Planet was the only newspaper represented. The paper did not
cover the second night, which reportedly involved a more subdued
discussion and drew a smaller turnout.
Discussion participants did not identify themselves, but one man
said of Rand, “I think she was kind of naive. She had a sort of
idealism. She saw things in black and white.”
A young woman added that she had “a big issue with a sophomoric
idealist. I’m pretty outraged” that Rand’s ideas are being made
required reading at WCU through the corporate clout of BB&T. She
added that, in her view, “Capitalism revolves around exploitation.”
In response, Peck said that “none of your characterizations of
capitalism are correct.” He said he sees laissez-faire capitalsim as
the political-economic social system of freedom.
On the second night, a Firestorm worker explained that BB&T
worked out a compromise with WCU, wherein it agreed to drop
requirements that a professor of capitalism be hired, that capitalism
only be mentioned in a positive light and that “Atlas Shrugged” be
required reading.
Halfway through the Jan. 12 discussion, the Planet
representative was threatened with bodily harm by one unidentified
attendee if he continued to shoot photos.
Later, some Firestorm “Collective” members demanded that the
Planet’s photos be surrendered, but the Planet reporter refused and the
meeting continued. A few weeks later, Firestorm sent the Planet a
letter of apology for not responding to the threat, but that permission
be sought to cover its future meetings.
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