a male [...] does not experience a constant physical danger (and the associated stress of being aware of said danger) whenever he leaves the house.
With the exception of rape, which tends to be a special case in most senses, men are overwhelmingly more likely to be the victims of every other type of violent crime including homicide. In addition, men make up 92% of workplace deaths (and presumably a correspondingly high proportion of the injuries) and are also significantly more likely to die in an accident off the job (again, presumably a similar distribution of injuries).
The idea that men are somehow protected from physical danger by “male privilege” is simply a preposterous notion.
If you say “I think Ayn Rand is crazy” what is that supposed to accomplish that waving a big Blue flag wouldn’t? You’re not starting a reasoned discussion, just drawing battle lines.
If you say “I think Ayn Rand’s philosophy is incorrect / immoral and here’s why...” then you’ll actually be able to have a constructive debate. You can learn why people might believe something you think is crazy, they can test their beliefs against your arguments, and in the end hopefully both sides will have adjusted in a more evidence-supported direction. That kind of communication is what LW is about; approaching areas where we are heavily biased with caution and rigor to separate out truth from myth.
(Note: I’m not an Objectivist and don’t vote Republican, although you’d probably consider me more radical than either of them anyway. The downvote was for poor logic, not a slight against a political group/philosophy.)