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Do not confuse appeasement with tactfulness or generosity. Appeasement is not consideration for the feelings of others, it is consideration for and compliance with the unjust, irrational and evil feelings of others. It is a policy of exempting the emotions of others from moral judgment, and of willingness to sacrifice innocent, virtuous victims to the evil malice of such emotions.

The truly and deliberately evil men are a very small minority; it is the appeaser who unleashes them on mankind; it is the appeaserā€™s intellectual abdication that invites them to take over. When a cultureā€™s dominant trend is geared to irrationality, the thugs win over the appeasers. When intellectual leaders fail to foster the best in the mixed, unformed, vacillating character of people at large, the thugs are sure to bring out the worst. When the ablest men turn into cowards, the average men turn into brutes.

ā€œAltruism as Appeasementā€
The Objectivist, Jan. 1966, 6

It is understandable that men might seek to hide their vices from the eyes of people whose judgment they respect. But there are men who hide their virtues from the eyes of monsters. There are men who apologize for their own achievements, deride their own values, debase their own character ā€” for the sake of pleasing those they know to be stupid, corrupt, malicious, evil.

[Intellectual appeasement] is an attempt to apologize for his intellectual concerns and to escape from the loneliness of a thinker by professing that his thinking is dedicated to some social-altruistic goal. It is an attempt that amounts to the wordless equivalent of the plea: ā€œIā€™m not an outsider! Iā€™m your friend! Please forgive me for using my mind ā€” Iā€™m using it only in order to serve you!ā€ .Ā .Ā . An intellectual appeaser surrenders morality, the realm of values, in order to be permitted to use his mind.

ā€œAltruism as Appeasementā€
The Voice of Reason: Essays in Objectivist Thought, 34
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