Joel McKinnon Miller

Joel McKinnon Miller

  • Born:
  • Height: 5' 11" (1.8 m)
  • Profession: actor
  • Representative Works: "Sprout", "I'm Nile"
  • Joel McKinnon Miller is an actor. His main works include " Hot Partner ", "Atlas Shrug: The First Part" and so on.
    Extended Reading
    • Demario 2022-03-22 08:01:04

      Sigh for the response that should have been but not produced

      If the sky-high titan "Atlas" shrugs his shoulders because of the stress and annoyance of the sky's work, the sky will stir.
        
         The elites and industrialists of various industries who promote the progress of human society - the real top-level designers (the masters of human society), if they are...

    • Clement 2022-03-22 08:01:04

      But so

      "Atlas Shrugged", as a masterpiece second only to the "Bible", seems reasonable and sensational, but I think it is more like a delicate conjecture, and it is regarded as a philosophy and lacks rigor and depth.

      Just like economics, various theories and formulas are complex and self-contained, but in...

    • Marcia 2022-03-27 09:01:23

      Dystopia is scarier than horror movies. When Ayn Rand published her novel in the 1950s, she obviously did not meet the underdog in her novels that the political class sided with decades later, and people hate it for it. And the individualism she advocates is only used by the top 1% Brainwashing the bottom 99% of people. There is no need to read novels, they are too far from reality.

    • Emil 2022-03-25 09:01:23

      Strongly recommended, it is best to finish it at one time, it will be more enjoyable. Also, why didn't Julie act, and another, the original Chinese version is no longer available for purchase

    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.