Turgot the Great

This outstanding book was ten years in the making, but it is finally here and the result is startling. It is a pocket edition, super economical, 525 pages of Turgot - the bulk of his life’s work, all beautifully organized. He might have been the key influence on Jefferson but, in any case, he certainly was the great French liberal of the 18th century, not only a proto-Austrian but also a fantastic defender of human liberty. You will find yourself wrapped up in his worldview and thinking like a liberal French aristocrat of the time.

Reason.tv on Environmental Disasters, What We’re Doing Tonight

Here’s a great video from Reason.tv on “The Top Five Environmental Disasters that Didn’t Happen.” I have asked, seriously, why people still pay attention to hysterical scare-mongers like Paul Ehrlich. I’ve been told it’s because they “raised awareness” of environmental issues, but after reading The Population Bomb and other screeds–and I use that word deliberately–by the more radical elements of the environmentalist movement, it’s pretty clear that Ehrlich and others have not “raised awareness” of global environmental challenges.

Music Wants to Be Free

Weird Al was nice enough to ask Lady Gaga if he could so this, but the fame-drunk starlet said no, and hence the song will be kept off his next album. No, this isn’t an IP problem as such – satire is legal, thank goodness, for whatever reason – but it illustrates the absurdities that the culture of IP has instilled in artists. The very notion that they imagine themselves as the sole owner of something like ubiquitous song – inherently malleable and infinitely distributable – is preposterous on its face.

Mossoff: Why Should Business Leaders Care About Intellectual Property (Objectivism)

As I’ve noted before, with the rise of IP abolitionism among libertarians, with IP defenders on the ropes, the Objectivists are trying to strike back. Rand’s defense of IP was incoherent, confused, and never complete (her brief argument assumed the US patent system is first to file, which is incorrect; and she had an incoherent admixture of utilitarianism and intuitionism in her tortured attempt to defend a finite, arbitrary term for patent and copyright).