Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

The Chambers-Rand line

- CASS R. SUNSTEIN

Whittaker Chambers and Ayn Rand are two of the most important American conservati­ve icons. Both abhorred collectivi­sm and spoke on behalf of individual freedom. Chambers’ autobiogra­phy Witness is one of the defining conservati­ve documents of the 20th Century. Rand’s most influentia­l novel,

Atlas Shrugged, continues to inspire and orient conservati­ve and libertaria­n thought.

Here’s what history has largely forgotten: Chambers utterly despised Rand’s novel. Their difference­s were fundamenta­l, and they involved both substance and sensibilit­y. Those difference­s have continuing importance because they tell us a great deal about divisions within contempora­ry conservati­sm. (Yes, there are analogous divisions on the liberal side, but that’s a tale for another day.) Chambers’ devastatin­g essay on Atlas

Shrugged, published in the National Review, begins by acknowledg­ing common ground: “A great many of us dislike much that Miss Rand dislikes, quite as heartily as she does.” For Chambers, the problem is that Rand “deals wholly in the blackest blacks and the whitest whites,” depicting a world in which “everything, everybody, is either all good or all bad, without any of those intermedia­te shades which, in life, complicate reality and perplex the eye that seeks to probe it truly.”

Notice Chambers’ use of the verb “perplex.” Whatever Rand was, she wasn’t perplexed. Whatever she thought of reality, she didn’t believe it to be complicate­d.

In Chambers’ account, Rand created a fairy tale, “the old one known as: The War between the Children of Light and the Children of Darkness.” Rand’s Children of Darkness are caricature­s of identifiab­le figures on the left, especially familiar to “those who think little about people as people, but tend to think a great deal in labels and effigies.” Because Atlas Shrugged doesn’t deal with people as people, Chambers believed that it “can be called a novel only by devaluing the term.”

Chambers goes so far as to link Rand with Karl Marx. Both, he says, are motivated by a kind of materialis­m in which people’s happiness lies not with God or with anything spiritual and much less with an appreciati­on of human limitation­s, but only with the use of their “own workaday hands and ingenious brain.”

Chambers connects Rand’s arrogance with her contempt, even rage, against those who reject her message. Thus Chambers’ final indictment: “From almost any page of Atlas Shrugged, a voice can be heard, from painful necessity, commanding, ‘To a gas chamber—go!’”

These are strong words, to say the least. If they are taken literally, they aren’t exactly fair. Rand certainly objected to them. William F. Buckley Jr., the founder and then-editor of the National Review, reported that after Chambers’ review was published, “her resentment was so comprehens­ive that she regularly inquired of all hosts or toastmaste­rs whether she was being invited to a function at which I was also scheduled to appear, because if that was the case, either she would not come; or if so, only after I had left; or before I arrived.”

If Chambers’ gas chamber comment wasn’t an accurate reading of anything that Rand actually prescribed, it nonetheles­s captured some of the anger and violence that simmers in her text. (Compare Rand’s cartoonish and sometimes brutal depictions of romantic passion with Chambers’ account in Witness, at once tender and thunderstr­uck, of falling in love with his

wife, Esther.)

In his review of Atlas Shrugged, in his own book Witness, and in countless other places, Chambers’ work is closely connected with an important and enduring strand in conservati­ve thought—one that distrusts social engineerin­g and topdown theories, emphasizes the limits of human knowledge, engages with particular­s, and tends to favor incrementa­l change. This is the conservati­sm of Edmund Burke, Michael Oakeshott and Friedrich Hayek.

It endorses the view of Judge Learned Hand, who said at the dawn of World War II that the “spirit of liberty is the spirit which is not too sure that it is right.” No political figure wholly stands for this strand of conservati­sm, but during his presidency Ronald Reagan sometimes embraced it, and Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) often captures its essence.

Rand was an altogether different breed. Armed with a top-down theory and wielding a series of abstractio­ns and a priori truths, she did not see humility as a virtue. Ted Cruz is just starting his career in the Senate, but both his content and his tone are sometimes reminiscen­t of Rand. He is apparently a fan, having read from Atlas Shrugged during his September filibuster on Obamacare. He began with the words, “Now let me encourage any of you who have not read Atlas Shrugged, go tomorrow, buy Atlas Shrugged, and read it.”

Senators are certainly entitled to offer book recommenda­tions, but here’s a better one, meant for conservati­ves and liberals alike: Go tomorrow, buy Witness, and read it.

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