In 1947,
Ayn Rand wrote a pamphlet for the Alliance, entitled
Screen Guide for Americans, based on her personal impressions of the American film industry. It read, in excerpt: The purpose of the Communists in Hollywood is
not the production of political movies openly advocating Communism. Their purpose is
to corrupt our moral premises by corrupting non-political movies — by introducing small, casual bits of propaganda into innocent stories — thus making people absorb the basic principles of Collectivism
by indirection and implication. The principle of free speech requires that we do not use police force to forbid the Communists the expression of their ideas — which means that we do not pass laws forbidding them to speak. But the principle of free speech does not require that we furnish the Communists with the means to preach their ideas, and does not imply that we owe them jobs and support to advocate our own destruction at our own expense. Rand cited examples of popular and critically acclaimed films that in her view contained hidden Communist or
Collectivist messages that had not been recognized as such, even by conservatives. Examples included
The Best Years of Our Lives (because it portrayed businessmen negatively, and suggested that bankers should give veterans collateral-free loans), and
A Song to Remember (because it implied without historical evidence that
Chopin sacrificed himself for a patriotic cause rather than devoting himself to his music). ==See also==