On Ayn Rand’s Curious Letter to Her Niece and Ideological Totalitarianism

I appreciate Ayn Rand’s contributions to the capitalistic, individualistic ethos as much as the next borderline-misanthrope dissident disenchanted with modern society — especially in this age of techno-fascistic anarcho-tyranny.

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(On a side note, one really begins to appreciate the trade-offs — and there are advantages and drawbacks on each side — between collectivism and individualism when one goes from the individual-oriented West to hivemind of the East. The contrasts are often stark.)

No one ever accused Ayn Rand of subtlety or lack of commitment to her hardcore, arguably reactionary brand of individualism. (I suppose her worldview is largely the result of her status as an exile from Soviet communism.)

Even her niece, who once hit her up for a relatively modest sum — I understand $25 was a lot of money back in 1949, but it was still nothing much to Ayn Rand at the time, who was already a renowned author — wasn’t granted a pass.

All Connie ostensibly wanted was a dress for high school graduation furnished by her celebrity aunt but Rand wasn’t having any of it without a lesson in the ethics of cutthroat capitalism and some serious strings attached.

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Via Letters of Ayn Rand (emphasis added):

“To Connie Papurt, AR’s niece, a daughter of Frank’s sister, Agnes Papurt

May 22, 1949

Dear Connie:

You are very young, so I don’t know whether you realize the seriousness of your action in writing to me for money. Since I don’t know you at all, I am going to put you to a test.

If you really want to borrow $25 from me, I will take a chance on finding out what kind of person you are. You want to borrow the money until your graduation. I will do better than that. I will make it easier for you to repay the debt, but on condition that you understand and accept it as a strict and serious business deal. Before you borrow it, I want you to think it over very carefully.

Here are my conditions: If I send you the $25, I will give you a year to repay it. I will give you six months after your graduation to get settled in a job. Then, you will start repaying the money in installments: you will send me $5 on January 15, 1950, and $4 on the 15th of every month after that; the last installment will be on June 15, 1950—and that will repay the total.

Are you willing to do it?

Here is what I want you to think over: Once you get a job, there will always be many things which you will need and on which you might prefer to spend your money, rather than repay a debt. I want you to decide now, in advance, as an honest and responsible person, whether you will be willing and able to repay this money, no matter what happens, as an obligation above and ahead of any other expense.

I want you to understand right now that I will not accept any excuse—except a serious illness. If you become ill, then I will give you an extension of time—but for no other reason. If, when the debt becomes due, you tell me that you can’t pay me because you needed a new pair of shoes or a new coat or you gave the money to somebody in the family who needed it more than I do—then I will consider you as an embezzler. No, I won’t send a policeman after you, but I will write you off as a rotten person and I will never speak or write to you again.

Now I will tell you why I am so serious and severe about this. I despise irresponsible people. I don’t want to deal with them or help them in any way. An irresponsible person is a person who makes vague promises, then breaks his word, blames it on circumstances and expects other people to forgive it. A responsible person does not make a promise without thinking of all the consequences and being prepared to meet them.

You want $25 for the purpose of buying a dress; you tell me that you will get a job and be able to repay me. That’s fine and I am willing to help you, if that is exactly what you mean. But if what you mean is: give me the money now and I will repay it if I don’t change my mind about it—then the deal is off. If I keep my part of the deal, you must keep yours, just exactly as agreed, no matter what happens.

I was very badly disappointed in Mimi and Marna [Docky]. When I first met Mimi, she asked me to give her money for the purpose of taking an art course. I gave her the money, but she did not take the art course. I supported Marna for a year—for the purpose of helping her to finish high school. She did not finish high school. I will take a chance on you, because I don’t want to blame you for the actions of your sisters. But I want you to show me that you are a better kind of person.

I will tell you the reasons for the conditions I make: I think that the person who asks and expects other people to give him money, instead of earning it, is the most rotten person on earthI would like to teach you, if I can, very early in life, the idea of a self-respecting, self-supporting, responsible, capitalistic person. If you borrow money and repay it, it is the best training in responsibility that you can ever have.

I want you to drop—if you have it in your mind—the idea that you are entitled to take money or support from me, just because we happen to be relatives. I want you to understand very clearly, right now, when you are young, that no honest person believes that he is obliged to support his relatives. I don’t believe it and will not do it. I cannot like you or want to help you without reason, just because you need the help. That is not a good reason. But you can earn my liking, my interest and my help by showing me that you are a good person.

Now think this over and let me know whether you want to borrow the money on my conditions and whether you give me your word of honor to observe the conditions. If you do, I will send you the money. If you don’t understand me, if you think that I am a hard, cruel, rich old woman and you don’t approve of my ideas—well, you don’t have to approve, but then you must not ask me for help.

I will wait to hear from you, and if I find out that you are my kind of person, then I hope that this will be the beginning of a real friendship between us, which would please me very much.”

Easy, girl!

Maybe just pump the brakes a little bit on the moralizing, no?

Before having read this letter, as a matter of serendipity, I’d been thinking about, in the context of my own life, the merits of viewing every personal decision, every social interaction through the lens of political ideology — which sort of just permeates everything, often without conscious thought, when your work requires ruminating on politics as a matter of routine, as mine does and as Rand’s did.

The conclusion I’ve been forced to draw is that fusing the personal and political is not a healthy way to live.

Rather, it seems to me, erecting some boundaries between the political (an abstract thing often) and the immediate and personal (not abstract) is probably the best way to go in terms of having a functional, healthy life — easier said than done, of course, when you come to identify personally with whatever ideology you espouse.

I wonder if Connie ever got her loan for the dress, and, if she did, whether ponied up the cash to repay the debt and made old aunty Ayn proud.

Ben Bartee is an independent Bangkok-based American journalist with opposable thumbs.

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