You are going to block this site. This will do the following:
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Are you sure you want to do this?
also I agree, I don't see how the economic argument follows the interpersonal idea. Fountainhead does not present a clear picture on what she wants--everyone can't be a Roark, that's just reality. And the state wasn't an antagonist at all in the plot - nobody in the 'free market' wants what he's offering. Did she want some change effected or just to bemoan the state of things? I don't get it.
I suppose I could read her actual theory stuff but I don't feel like humoring her further