Re: Re: amusing copyright limits

From: <sstouden[_at_]thelinks.com>
Date: Thu, 20 Nov 2003 11:30:32 -0500

It is amazing to see that any human for any reason would be willing to allow any government to take the beautiful green gardens which their "basic human talents" created and to then transpose those taken talent made gardens into fenced yards with but one gate {the gate of monopoly}, requiring the very humanity that created the garden to pay or jump hoops to walk on {access} their own creations, but some humans think it is ok.

When a government conditions participation in one's own society on monopolized gating, it stratifies that society into the haves and the have nots. In the case of patent and copyright, it stratifies not only humans, but also nation states. The rule of law is the most powerful ruling force ever devised and it should not be used to achieve commerical advantage in a free or a democratic society.

Even more difficult to understand is why any human would 1. want to allow "human thought" just as soon as it is expressed to be

   packaged as a private property with a monopoly gate as its entrance. 2. want to allow any government to effect that packaging by rule of law 3. agree that the transfer from the creative human to a non human creates

   in the non human, the right to monopolize that human thought. (its akin    to selling body part franchises, granting a monopoly to sell be the    only legitimate seller of arms, legs, or eyes, or other organs.) I    wonder how much the monopoly for sell eyes will go for at the    government auctions?
4. agree to allow a government to order its society so that owners of the

   of the greatest numbers of packaged, monopolized human thoughts,    determine wealth, especially, when that determination leads to    wealthy non humans (i.e., corporations, NPOs, and institutions own      most of the valuable "expressions of human thoughts") 5. agree to allow a government to deny access to these (by ticketing or

   outright denial) monopolies based on one's ability or willingness to    pay at the gate or based on one's insider relationship with the    department of government that determines one needs to know or    based on one's willingness to abide by the rules of a society (like    willingness to get a Phd just so can see its subject matter)designed    by the elected few as dictated to by the aristocrats.

It is clear that rule of law has converted human expression into a commodity and in doing so the law making state has converted humanity from player in its own society to pawn in the game of $s played by the non human elements of the aristocratically designed democratic society.

Kitten of life (knowledge, information and technlogy and the training, and education needed to use it) is an inalienable human attribute which should not be eligible for commercialization; and but for, the right of government to make laws without non elected human citizen veto, it probably would not exist as Napster clearly showed.

BTW, there is little difference in the file sharing of Napster and HTTP file sharing. Again showing that when the files owned by Aristocrats are challenged by technology, the rule of law serves the Aristocrats well, because its soldiers round up the humans citizens who use it.

Once again I am no lawyer, but i can see that something is wrong in our society. Hope this Amuses you.

sterling

On Wed, 19 Nov 2003, Wallace J.McLean wrote:

> >It is amusing to see professors and other academics arguing against
> >copyright protection
>
>
> Don't confuse arguing against overlong terms, term extension, erosion of
> exemptions, advocacy of new exemptions, or advocacy of other amendments to
> copyright acts, with "arguing against copyright protection" itself.
>
>
>
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Received on Thu Nov 20 2003 - 21:30:32 GMT

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