Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[283] [284] David Nolan, one founder of the Libertarian Party, said that "without Ayn Rand, the libertarian movement would not exist". [285] In his history of that movement, journalist Brian Doherty described her as "the most influential libertarian of the twentieth century to the public at large". [ 257 ]
Responding to a question about the Libertarian Party of the United States in 1976, Rand said: The trouble with the world today is philosophical: only the right philosophy can save us. But this party plagiarizes some of my ideas, mixes them with the exact opposite—with religionists, anarchists and every intellectual misfit and scum they can ...
The Libertarian Party of Ohio (LPO) was the product of a women's project for limited government, organized in 1972 by Kay Harroff and fellow Randians of a chapter of Objectivists meeting regularly in Cleveland.
He was first elected as a Republican, and left the Republican Party to become an independent in early 2020 before switching to the Libertarian Party in April 2020. He did not seek re-election in 2020 [2] and switched back to the Republican Party in 2024 to run for the U.S. Senate election in Michigan. [3]
[citation needed] He was involved with various political movements throughout his life, notably with Ayn Rand and, later, the Libertarian Party of United States. His influence is lasting in the libertarian and anarcho-capitalist movements. Man, Economy, and State, 1962; For a New Liberty: The Libertarian Manifesto, 1973; Conceived in Liberty ...
Ed Clark, 1980 Libertarian Party presidential nominee [56] Spike Cohen, entrepreneur, podcaster, and 2020 Libertarian Party vice-presidential nominee [57] Chris Cole, 2008 Libertarian nominee for the U.S. Senate in North Carolina [58] Michael Colley, U.S. Navy vice admiral and member of the board of directors of the Libertarian Party [59]
Hospers was interested in Objectivism, and was once a friend of the philosopher Ayn Rand, though she later broke with him. In 1972, Hospers became the first presidential candidate of the Libertarian Party, and was the only minor party candidate to receive an electoral vote in that year's U.S. presidential election. [1]
[9] Rand then began Atlas Shrugged to depict the morality of rational self-interest, [10] by exploring the consequences of a strike by intellectuals refusing to supply their inventions, art, business leadership, scientific research, or new ideas to the rest of the world. [11] Rand began the first draft of the novel on September 2, 1946. [12]