There are some decent arguments out there that argue in favor of a state, welfare rights, war, democracy, drug laws, and so on. They are all flawed, since libertarianism is right, but there are coherent, honest arguments that we libertarians have to grapple with.
But it is striking that there are no decent arguments for IPâas Manuel Lora remarked to me, âYou know, I havenât seen a good pro IP article ever.â This is true. One sees the same incoherent or insincere claims made over and over, such as:
There are other arguments, I suppose, but they are so incoherent as to defy description. They often involve crankish initial caps, like Property and Rights, the Internet equivalent of crayons.
I have truly never seen a coherent, good argument for IP. The advocates are either utilitarian, with all the problems that accompany that (not to mention they never have any evidence for their claims); or the advocate a more âprincipledâ, rights-based type of IP that, if taken seriously, would completely undermine all real property rights and make life on earth impossible, so they retreat from this and impose arbitrary, senseless limits on it. What a kluge.
In a recent discussion, Whatâs Wrong With Theft?, one of the IP advocates, when pushed into a corner, ended up arguing that rights to own property include the right to control all âaccess toâ and âinteractions withâ oneâs propertyâand that âinteractionsâ include observing or knowing about or learning facts about the things owned by someone, and that when you use this knowledge you are âinteracting withâ the property, and thus âstealingâ it (even though the owner still has it). So here we have it: IP means âinteraction rights.â Wow. This is how kooky all IP arguments ultimately are.