Democracy ain't that. Majority Rule, Majority Fool
This majority rule fiesta is a recipe for disaster, where rights and rationality take a back seat to mob rule.
Sane Perspective
Ayn Rand Slams Democracy: Majority Rule, Majority Fool
So Ayn Rand, in her typically subtle fashion (not), goes to town on democracy, painting it like a kindergarten where the kids vote to eat candy for lunch. Democracy, in her view, is this chaotic playground where the majority can do whatever it pleases, legality be darned. It's like letting your neighbors vote on the color of your house, the breed of your dog, and whether pineapple belongs on pizza (spoiler alert: it doesn't). This majority rule fiesta is a recipe for disaster, where rights and rationality take a back seat to mob rule. Remember poor Socrates? Guy gets a death sentence because a bunch of ancient Greeks didn't like his philosophy. Talk about a tough crowd. It's like getting canceled on social media, but with hemlock instead of hashtags.
The Tyranny of "Representative Democracy": A Wolf in Sheep's Clothing
Then, Rand throws a curveball and says that a representative democracy is even worse. Imagine that! It's like taking the chaos of direct democracy and handing it over to a select few who can really run wild with power. In this scenario, a small group of "representatives" (read: wannabe tyrants) could potentially trample individual rights and serve up tyranny on a silver platter. And the best part? They'd be doing it in the name of the people. It's like hiring someone to do your grocery shopping and they come back with a truckload of Brussels sprouts because they claim that's what the majority wants. The horror! It's a twisted game of telephone where your freedom is on the line, and the message gets more distorted the further it travels from its source.
Always remember to check out the original source to dive deeper into Rand's scathing critique of democracy and her love affair with individual rights.