Clay Bunker

Clay Bunker

  • Born:
  • Height:
  • Extended Reading
    • Carmine 2022-03-22 08:01:04

      Atlas: the giant who bears everything but is despised

      1. The third generation of the family business. A sister, a brother. A family-focused business. One focuses on politics. Meet the rich. One believes that only by improving technology and improving operations. Technological innovation wins the future. Another is to think that social relations,...

    • Darrion 2022-03-22 08:01:04

      Who the hell is John Galt?

      Banned books, bad reviews but great sales, the genre has always been appealing.
      As the first step in the trilogy, part I, which was only released in 2011, will definitely make audiences who have not seen the original read in a fog. The story that only exposes the tip of the iceberg of the plot has...

    • Adella 2022-03-22 09:03:03

      After reading the first one, I have no interest in the original novel. The story is too unsuitable for me. If I go on like this, 2/3 will not be mentioned, but Mr. Grant Bowler has attracted me. I like his type, and there will be more in the future. Follow him!

    • Cassandra 2022-03-26 09:01:15

      The railroad tycoon and the digging Atlantis...a near-future version of "Knight's Walk". Simple or even monotonous camera shots, the plot is rushed, and it looks more like a condensed and heavily edited mini-series or TV movie, or a semi-finished product.

    Atlas Shrugged: Part I quotes

    • Sign: I'm leaving it as I found it. Take over. It's yours.

    • Dagny Taggart: It's a real mystery why the Twentieth Century Motor Company failed.

      Henry Rearden: It's no mystery. Bad ideas brought it down.

      Dagny Taggart: Ideas?

      Henry Rearden: As I understand it, the company flattened the wage scale and still paid everyone according to their needs, not according to their contributions.

      Dagny Taggart: Why all these stupid altruistic urges? It's not being charitable or fair. What is it with people today?

      Henry Rearden: so, after a short while, no surprise the smartest managers and the better workers left the company. The hundreds of remaining staff couldn't handle it alone.

      [bird wings flapping away]

      Henry Rearden: Service dropped, quality in their once-great products was gone and that was that. The Twentieth Century Motor Company went under.

      Dagny Taggart: That's depressing.