Fictional Account of Diary of Ayn Rand
This is an excerpt from the paper...
From the Diary of Ayn Rand: May, 2003Montesquieu wrote over and over and over again about his belief that men were born equal in a state of nature, but could not remain so, since society destroys equality, and only laws can restore it. Laws, and an oppressive pedantry that is as far removed from any kind of Socratic discourse as Osama Bin Laden is from eating a seder dinner. Unlike Bin Laden, Montesquieu had faith in the concept of a political system based on laws (Rahe, 1997). One of his favorite philosophers here at the club is Madison, whom he enjoys tweaking. Like the day when Montesquieu said to Madison "Your drive for empire resulted in a Modern Day Rome, a powerful nation indeed this USA. But you gave up too much to achieve this power. Look at the USA in 2002-2003. I was rightłnot you. The nation became too big and lacks a sense of community." To everyone's surprise, Madison did not disagree with the conclusion. He said the reference to Rome was perfect, and that the analogy should include "Little Boots" (the nickname given to the mad emperor Caligula, which was also a reference to his warrior father, who was beloved.) Madison said "That would include Bush the fat
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Some common words found in the essay are:
Betty Friedan, Little Boots, Condoleza Rice, Alexander Hamilton, Day Rome, Montesquieu Homer, Ayn Rand, Woodrow Wilson, Laden Montesquieu, Supreme Court, little boots, john bartlett 2002, bin laden, bartlett 2002, john bartlett, 17th edition, political liberty, hamilton madison, mirror political, mirror political liberty,
Approximate Word count = 799
Approximate Pages = 3 (250 words per page)
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