essaysbysean.blogspot.com
There is an all-to-believable
scene in Robert Heinlein’s novel about an engineer who builds a bomb shelter, Farnham’s Freehold. Poor Farnham, emerging
to rebuild after the apocalypse, realizes he forgot to include something… a
wheelbarrow. I can relate, although I grew up using one. We always kept our
barrow tipped over so that rain would not collect and rust out the bottom.
Strange to think that in the Middle Ages they still hadn’t invented
wheelbarrows yet. Or buttons.
Here’s a poem by William
Carlos Williams
The Red Wheelbarrow
So much depends
upon
a red wheel
barrow
glazed with rain
water
beside the white
chickens
To me, this is a
modern poem, since all the other poems I have memorized could be found in a 1940’s
era poem collection, from a decade before I was born. This poem I have heard my
college English teacher recite—it’s such a lovely piece. But is it still under
copyright? Since it’s modern and doesn’t rhyme I don’t know. (I found out)
I do know I cheer for
the inventions of copyright and patent laws, inventions that are figuratively like
a wheelbarrow for carrying supplies for everyone
into the future.
Back home, with our
wheelbarrow in the background, we raised two black calves, Angus and Dina, of
the Aberdeen Angus breed.
Suppose here on
the prairies you were trying to grow a couple of cows. Suppose you ended up battling blizzards to return
them to the barn, hand feeding them during sickness, and struggling to fatten
them during them health. And just when you’re ready to take them to
auction—someone steals them. Next year you bust a gut to raise two more, next
year rustled again. Could anyone blame you if you said, “Ah, forget it, let my
neighbors eat vegetables.”
The law of “risk to
reward” means that safer investments pay less, risky ones pay more—if they ever
pay off. Looking for oil is so risky, yet so important to society, that
government will give “wildcatters” special tax incentives.
If digging dry
holes is risky, so is any attempt at creation and invention. In Robert
Heinlein’s novel Friday a man spends
years in poverty, working down in his dark basement, trying to invent a power
source out of a stone. Against long odds he succeeds. Shouldn’t he, at last,
make a lot of money? Or should everybody and their dog be allowed to rustle his
idea without having to endure poverty down below ground? And if his idea gets
rustled, then why would any other inventor, with eyes to see, ever choose to
live in poverty chasing a dream, a dream so likely to be ripped off? “Ah, forget it, let
my neighbors waste fossil fuels.”
Will you spend
your man-hours in trying to invent a better wheelbarrow? Unlikely. Or in composing
a wheelbarrow song? Unlikely. Yet without progress, our community loses. We
lose if nobody creates any new hardware, software, songs or books.
The backdrop of Friday is a dysfunctional society, without
a sense of good citizenship, in a world where the inventor despairs of legal protection
after applying for a patent. He thinks people will go read the patent, and then
break the law by producing their own power stones. In despair, he proceeds to fabricate
his stones in a secure windowless factory without applying for patent rights. This
works out: Nobody learns the secret of the power stones. Unfortunately for his neighbors,
long after the period of patent/copyright would have been over, the stones are still a secret, and so society doesn’t
get to make them in great cheap quantities. Serves them right. If only folks
had worked to establish a sound democracy with respect for laws that serve the
community.
The natural law of
“risk to reward” won’t exist in our universe if pirates are allowed to do
violence to the laws of patent and copyright.
As a music lover I
sometimes wonder if, during my lifetime, because of pirates, composing rock
music of the more creative sort, as in the 1960’s, will become as uneconomical
as composing classical music or poetry. Perhaps musicians will settle for keeping
a less risky but more secure day job. Or perhaps musicians will resort to having a
fulltime lifestyle of touring while affording only a timid nest egg, touring to
merely entertain, too timid to bother people with artsy innovations. No Dylan
standing on stage unplugged. Or unclothed.
This morning I did
some research: In Canada, The Red
Wheelbarrow has been public domain for two years, since the writer is fifty-two
years dead. In the U.S. it will take another 23 years. Why? Perhaps it’s because
congress thinks fifty years is not enough time for a poet to give money to his children
(to pass on to their children) but I think it’s because corporations like
Disney are immortal institutions. I value artists. Institutions? Not so much.
I was with artists
just last month doing Spoken Word Poetry. As for words and names, my ethic for pronouncing names
in the public domain is this: If a person or a character in a book has been
dead fifty years, then his feelings won’t be hurt, and so I won’t pronounce his
name foreign-style. Unless maybe his name is fun to say, like Tigger or Jean
Val Jean. When I have my nose in Les Miserables, Marcus and Inspector Javert
and all the rest of get their names Anglicized. Mister Paris is not “Paree”, and
Bonaparte is not “Emperrorr Napoleonne.”
Of course, if I
had the nerve, then my tongue and I could stand in front of a mirror practicing
shifting gears to cope with alien pronunciations, but I won’t expect normal
people to do that. Except for, maybe, art collectors with ample leisure time.
So my ethic of Anglicizing remains.
This morning, when
I didn’t immediately know if I could publish Williams’s wheelbarrow poem, I
took the time to find out. I wasn’t about to risk being a lazy good-for-nothing
pirate.
Sean Crawford
Calgary
May
2015
Footnotes:
~Yes dear reader,
I’ve seen Lieutenant Tom Paris playing the part of Captain Proton on that fine feminist TV
series Star Trek Voyager. (Link to a Roger Ebert essay)
~I have an essay on Pirates and
Prohibition, with links, archived in April 2012
Resources
What Makes a Terrorist: Economics and the Roots of Terrorism by Alan B. Krueger, Princeton University Press, link
~Are software
patents evil? In an essay with that title, my favorite nerd, Paul Graham, wrote
it would take him several weeks of research to determine whether patents have
been a net win for encouraging innovation. You can find all sorts of his essays
here (link).
Focus on Imperialism
Everyone has heard
of “Yankee imperialism.” Some years back the Yanks imperialized each other, you
might say, with their “Disney amendment” which gives a much longer life,
another generations worth, to copyright law.
Do Yankees value
imperialism and money more than, say, discouraging war?
Yes.
Despite some protests, and some sanctions, Americans were selling scrap iron to the fascist Japanese war machine, mainly
for use against innocent Asians, right up until the Japanese threw it back in
their faces at Pear Harbor.
Once a war starts,
do U.S. citizens value imperialism more than winning?
Yes.
It’s been scientifically
shown that terrorism is associated NOT with “poverty and despair” but rather, with a lack of civil liberties. How
unconscionable then, to Muslim eyes, that during the War on Terror, at the dying
of the Arab spring, the U.S. sold military supplies to strengthen the regime in
Egypt.
Not only that,
they twisted Egypt’s arm, with Secretary of State John Kerry making a special
trip to do the twisting, to take a big U.S. loan, without attaching any
requirements for civil liberties or human rights whatsoever. That’s crazy.
That’s as crazy as trying to fight two wars at once.
Is it impolite to
burst a U.S. citizen’s bubble of “plausible deniability?”
No.
The greater social
good trumps a “bad truth.” Here in Calgary, despite our high percentage of
American workers, when a petroleum engineer did a speech exposing a U.S. fruit
company, at my Toastmasters International club, he did not stop to be polite. He
did not ask first whether any U.S. citizens were present who might be offended.
And I won’t worry about my essay being polite.
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