Posted on 01/26/2016 7:04:30 PM PST by Kaslin
Due to this weekend's torrential winter downpour, we are currently in the midst of a federal government shutdown. Uh oh. We've been told so often by so many that a government shutdown will shake the Earth from its orbital path and send us careening into the Sun. So far, thankfully, that has not occurred.
Despite our promised fiery demise, we have begun to excavate DC (...wait a moment, what's the rush?). DC is doing what anyone does in such situations. You triage - you prioritize what gets attention in what order.
There is oh-so-much that should just stay buried. Not physically, I guess, but metaphorically. There is oh-so-much DC is doing - that it absolutely shouldn't. And there is oh-so-much more DC wants to do that it absolutely shouldn't.
Among the myriad latter are two bills currently under consideration: The House's Innovation Act and the Senate's PATENT Act. Bills that - no matter the expressed intent - will fundamentally undermine the ability of people with ideas to protect their ideas with patents.
Sadly, in a Republican-controlled Congress there are Republicans pushing these bills. They do so in the alleged name of "tort reform" - to attack and undermine "patent trolls." When you rightly oppose their attempts to fundamentally transform how we handle intellectual property you are accused of being on the side of the trial lawyers and their disruptive "patent troll" clients.
Except you're actually defending one of the crucial components of any free market economy: private property. These underminers want to pretend intellectual property isn't property - but that doesn't make it so. Some may want to pretend an avowed Socialist isn't in contention for the Democrat presidential nomination - but that doesn't make it so.
In our information economy - where computers rule and nigh everything is digital - less and less is tangible. But just because you can't touch it - doesn't mean it isn't property. Stealing a compact disc from Tower Records was wrong. Downloading without paying for an MP3 is wrong. New technologies, same principles. To oppose these bills is to be on the side of all things private property.
In opposing these bills, you are also on the side of people crucial to any successful economy: the creators. The people who have the ideas that make everything else possible. No matter the format - vinyl records, eight-tracks, cassette tapes, CDs or MP3s - the ideas pressed thereon are what matter.
Beyonce's songs are important - the format on which you acquire them is not. And investments in these ideas are like investments in any other ideas. If you don't protect them, if you can't protect them, you'll stop getting them.
When you steal a Beyonce album, you don't just steal from Beyonce. You steal from the companies that invest a lot of money in Beyonce and a whole lot of other Creators who aren't (yet?) profitable. If the investors' investments aren't protected by law they can't get a return on their investments. So they'll stop investing.
And when they stop investing we'll stop getting new ideas. No new ideas, no more products, no goods, no services. Our entire economy will grind to a halt.
It isn't your fault that the Innovation and PATENT Acts are drafted so broadly and badly - they place you on the same side as trial lawyers. (Though for every terrible trial lawyer - there is a trial lawyer on the other side of the courtroom fending off his cohort with a whip and a chair. They ain't all bad.)
And "patent trolls" is anti-property-activist-speak - for people suing to protect their patents. And filing lawsuits against the very many thieves is just about the only way to protect patents.
These bills throw out not just the baby with the bathwater, but the entire nursery. New ideas, new creations, and new products are smothered in the crib perversely, all in the name of protecting innovation.
Currently, the Innovation and PATENT Acts are buried in respective congressional committees. Like much of DC they should stay buried.
We won't like what happens if they're unearthed.
Living 80 miles north of the beltway in the heart of “snowmeggedon” here is what is important:
1) A right relationship with God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
2) A loving family.
3) A full freezer and pantry
4) A full rack of wood for the stove—inside the house.
5) A full tank of gas for the snow equipment and generator.
6) A reliable Internet connection to keep in touch with FReepers.
That was a good exercise in prioritization. Maslow would disapprove. Ja vell.
This is pathetic. My kids should have gone to school today and the school is still closed tomorrow. The Feds are on a three hour delay because the DC govt. doesn’t know what to do with the snow.
In New York City today, things were back to normal. We got just about the same amount of snow as D.C. But we are mostly private sector workers so we came to work. I did notice I have a hole in my shoe because my sock got soaking wet after walking through the still slushy streets. I’ll have to go buy new shoes. No big deal.
I’ve noticed an interesting disparity.
We live in RED Maryland Harford County. A full two days ago, they reported that north of 80% of all county roads had at least one pass of a snowplow. We got hammered with 30-37” of global warming in the county.
I had business in northern virginia today where they got 24”’or so. Still a significant snowfall.
On the radio, some clown from deep blue liberal Montgomery county was all proud that by tomorrow, four full days after the snowstorm, about 75% of their roads would have a plow drive through. I also heard Baltimore and Baltimore county are doing equally as inept of a job. Both liberal.
Why isn’t the media on a panic over the government snow shutdown.
I had to go to work this evening. One of those essential employees, don’tcha know. The roads in Montgomery County, MD were still so scrooooowed up that I get there nearly an hour late. I wouldn’t mind if the federal government took the whole week off; would lessen the carmageddons occuring on our snow-choked roads.
I heard on the radio, during my traffic-clooged commute from Hell, that Monkey County is promising to have all roads plowed by 7 a.m. tomorrow. I said, “bulllll-sh******t!”
No, dear writer, they're not.
However, the concept of intellectual and artistic property rights is important.
Yes it is. The Founders knew what they were doing when they protected patents and copyrights in the Constitution. I have nothing but contempt for those, especially Libertarians, who try to deny that intellectual property really is property, and that the originators have rights that the government should protect.
I agree. Copyright violation is theft, and no amount of, “Everyone’s doing it,” or, “Who’s going to know?” makes it any different.
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