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You’re in the Airwaves Now

Legendary host of the classical music program Adventures In Good Music, Karl Haas, died earlier this month. This is a note I received from Eric R. regarding the loss:

I’m sorry that Hunter S. Thompson’s death has made you so sad; I forget that you liked him. I heard something very sad today too. I logged onto the local NPR playlist to note some music I heard yesterday and learned that Karl Haas died earlier this month. Apparently they have been replaying Adventures in Good Music archival material and I missed the depressing news.

Our networks will regale us endlessly with Paris Hilton’s expandable/slammable twat and Howard Stern broadcasting through his anus but not an overt word about one of the few truly innovative Disc Jockeys in America who, for over 30 years, used the medium for something other than mouth farts for the masses.

Haas was heir to the best of the Occidental spirit, and truly made it our own with all the leisurely charm of a culture now decidedly alien to the general public, and apparently relegated to pockets and byways sheltering bravely from the obscene roar of hunched moron satyrs in seemingly endless droves who drag ham-fisted knuckles through the same dreary, uncouth spectacle day-in/day-out.

Being an animal never got you so far. But even the apes have manners, and some of them are even nice … just ask good ol’ Jane and poor Diane.

Time to turn it up and be the next generations’ legends, people.

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Richard Stallman (Mr. GNU) recently wrote a piece on the term “intellectual property.” His opinion is that the term itself should be done away with as it represents only one side of the argument, which views global intellectual culture as property. He suggests no replacement term at all because “a different name could eliminate the bias, but won’t address the term’s deeper problem: overgeneralization. There is no such unified thing as ‘intellectual property’. It is a mirage, which appears to have a coherent existence only because the term suggests it does.” [Full paper: Did You Say “Intellectual Property”? It’s a Seductive Mirage]

Indeed, how do we represent the true nature of the battle between those who want to make money from indefinitely copyrighting works (publishing / record industry Sith lords and their government lackeys) and the people who want to protect the public domain (bad-ass Jedi knights – Ewoks need not apply)?

This is a suggestion I posted to the Union for the Public Domain bulletin board this morning:

As Wiley says in today’s comics page, “It’s all about semantics. You call it a drinking problem. I call it a reality exit strategy.”

I agree with Stallman in that a way to take back the argument is to change its one-sided terms. The words that are used to posit an issue offer a lot to or detract from that issue in terms of connotation. I would much rather call “it” what it is, a book, music, art, etc. rather than “intellectual property” and discuss each on an individual basis. For one, using the term “intellectual property” makes the property value of the media more important than the media itself.

So, guess what. Reclaim the argument. Those who want to stop calling it IP should do so and put forth future arguments on their own terms. The others can continue to refer to it as IP if they wish, because that’s probably how they see the material. Once that is done, we can go back to fighting the growing legions of interests who want to keep intellectual culture out of the hands of as many people as possible.

What do you think?

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Ha! Thank goodness the family and friends are cool enough not to turn his death into a major-network, tear-jerker mockery.

Gonzo’s ashes ‘to be blasted from cannon’

Be your crazy self all over the universe, Hunter. We’ll miss you.

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Now

“Now is the reality in which time is contained, past and future are but dreams. Not to act and accomplish now is not to act and accomplish at all.

“The foolish man, loving the boggy side of procrastination rather than the firm highway of present effort says, “I will rise early tomorrow; I will carry out my intentions tomorrow.” But the wise man, realizing the momentous impact of the eternal now, rises early today, keeps out of debt today, carries out his intentions today, and so never departs from strength and peace and ripe accomplishment.”

— Anonymous

If you know who wrote this, please drop me a line.

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Ilona Sekacz

Here is a list of the works of Ilona Sekacz. S/he wrote music for the cinematic version of P.D. James’s A Certain Justice … for some reason, a part of the music popped into my head again a long time after I saw that show.

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