> An appeals court sided with the director of the U.S. Copyright Office, saying her role is to work with Congress. ... her post is part of the Library of Congress.
This could be just noise and theatrics, but I won't be surprised if SCOTUS invents another creative interpretation and allows the POTUS to do whatever he wants with the Library of Congress, then with Congress itself and... the sky is the limit.
Not that this particular Congress would even notice.
The 1st attempt to fire her was the day after her office issued a report which said copying without permission to train generative AI may not be legal always.[1]
Originally, Jefferson imagined a state where all acts of legislation came with sunset dates. The idea being that a State would cap out and auto prune itself through the inherent friction of having to reapprove only the most important foundations of itself. Instead of accruing cruft, it'd allow for an equilibrium of law and liberties constantly returning to the public, and only the most unanimously supported measures to stay in force. A government for the living, rather than one of the legacies of the dead, which was favored by Madison.
No it doesn't. We've got so much cruft and deadlock because we've operated in a Madisonian regime. With that cruft comes selective enforcement, and with that both contempt, and loss of legitimacy in the eyes of the populace. It is enough that the younger generations feel hemmed in by a gerontocracy to see that something has gone horribly wrong, and that the direction we've been going is part of what got us to the current situation.
> And every other Founding Father rejected the idea as completely unworkable.
I went looking for more information when parent left their comment, and I found some letters:
- Jefferson to Madison, Sept. 6, 1789 ("earth belongs in usufruct to the living" 19-year term, expiry by default)
- Madison to Jefferson, Feb. 4, 1790 (three classes of laws; stability, property, tacit consent)
- Jefferson to Samuel Kercheval, July 12, 1816 (periodic constitutional conventions every 19–20 years)
You said "every other Founding Father" but I can't find any letters to/from anyone else, could you please share with me the source(s) you got this from so I could continue reading about this? Very interesting subject I hadn't hear about before.
How on earth would this work? Would you throw out all of contract and business law? Any permits people have get reset? Is the military disbanded and restarted from scratch?
Another chapter of how undermining societal decision making by ongoingly circumventing instances, which do not act in favor of the own goals. It's highly disturbing how ineffective and weak the judicial system looks like sometimes.
This could be just noise and theatrics, but I won't be surprised if SCOTUS invents another creative interpretation and allows the POTUS to do whatever he wants with the Library of Congress, then with Congress itself and... the sky is the limit.
Not that this particular Congress would even notice.
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