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Williamson M. Evers | Hoover InstitutionKinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 146.

Today I had a discussion with Williamson Evers, about his pathbreaking 1977 article Toward a Reformulation of the Law of Contracts, which was the first article ever published in the Journal of Libertarian Studies (Evers’s other JLS articles).

This article was relied on heavily by Rothbard, in ch. 19 of The Ethics of Liberty, “Property Rights and the Theory of Contracts.” I discuss this piece in detail in my 2003 JLS article “A Libertarian Theory of Contract: Title Transfer, Binding Promises, and Inalienability” (now in Legal Foundations of a Free Society (Houston, Texas: Papinian Press, 2023)), and I also discuss it in my post Justice and Property Rights: Rothbard on Scarcity, Property, Contracts…. See also my post Thoughts on Walter Block on Voluntary Slavery, Alienability vs. Inalienability, Property and Contract, Rothbard and Evers.

A fascinating interview. We discussed the genesis of this important theory and related matters. I appreciate greatly Dr. Evers taking time to discuss this matter with me.

Note: The purpose of talking to Evers was to ask him questions about his own theory of contract. I sent him a copy of my article as a way to persuade him to talk with me, but my purpose was not to discuss my article with him. However, Evers seemed to think this was the reason for my call and he kept bringing the topic back to my article, when I really wanted to discuss his. In any event, as he was my guest, I did not try too hard to change the topic, and did end up getting a great deal of useful information from him about his original paper and the origin of these ideas.

Grok shownotes:

[00:00:01 – 00:17:54] Stephan Kinsella interviews Williamson Evers, a Stanford PhD and Hoover Institution research fellow, about the title-transfer theory of contract, a libertarian legal framework pioneered by Evers and Murray Rothbard. Evers recounts the theory’s genesis in the 1970s, stemming from late-night discussions with Rothbard, which led to his seminal 1977 article in the Journal of Libertarian Studies. The theory redefines contracts as transfers of property titles rather than enforceable promises, aligning with natural rights and private property principles. They discuss its revolutionary potential, its underappreciation, and its distinction from traditional legal systems that emphasize expectations or obligations to act, highlighting how all contractual obligations can be reduced to property title transfers.

[00:17:55 – 00:34:55] The conversation delves into nuanced aspects of the theory, including future title transfers, bankruptcy, and inalienability. Evers addresses concerns about contracts involving non-existent or future assets, arguing they remain valid, though he opposes debtor’s prison and overly punitive measures like exorbitant performance bonds that could resemble slavery. He critiques the idea of “walking away” from contracts, as seen in mortgage defaults, and emphasizes the need for further research into issues like abandonment of hazardous property and the intersection of inalienability with punishment. Kinsella and Evers agree that the theory requires more development, citing contributions from scholars like Randy Barnett, and conclude with mutual appreciation for the discussion’s depth and its implications for libertarian legal philosophy.

Transcript and Grok detailed shownotes below.

Update: See also Thoughts on Walter Block on Voluntary Slavery, Alienability vs. Inalienability, Property and Contract, Rothbard and Evers
(Jan. 9, 2022).

See also KOL197 | Tom Woods Show: The Central Rothbard Contribution I Overlooked, and Why It Matters: The Rothbard-Evers Title-Transfer Theory of Contract.

Related links:

Youtube:

GROK DETAILED SHOWNOTES

Detailed Segment Summary

  • [00:00:01 – 00:06:42] Introduction and Genesis of the Title-Transfer Theory

    • Kinsella introduces Evers, noting his 1977 article as the first in the Journal of Libertarian Studies.

    • Evers shares his background, his friendship with Rothbard, and their late-night discussions that shaped the theory.

    • The title-transfer theory emerged from Evers’ graduate work at Stanford, where he explored underdeveloped libertarian legal concepts, buildingrived from Rothbard’s initial ideas in 1974 and formalized in Evers’ 1977 article, later used in Rothbard’s Ethics of Liberty.

  • [00:06:43 – 00:15:30] Core Principles and Philosophical Foundations

    • The theory posits that contracts are transfers of property titles, not enforceable promises, aligning with the idea that all rights are property rights over scarce resources.

    • Evers critiques utilitarian views of contracts based on expectations, advocating for a natural rights approach.

    • Discussion touches on inalienability, emphasizing that self-ownership prevents selling oneself into slavery, distinguishing body rights from alienable property rights.

    • Evers and Kinsella compare their philosophical leanings: Evers favors an Aristotelian-Thomist approach, while Kinsella is influenced by Hoppe’s argumentation ethics, though both see compatibility.

  • [00:15:31 – 00:24:52] Future Obligations and Onerous Damages

    • They explore contracts involving future obligations, such as delivering non-existent assets, which Evers considers valid but not justifying debtor’s prison.

    • Evers raises the issue of performance bonds and whether exorbitant penalties (e.g., $1 trillion) could equate to slavery, suggesting this area needs further research.

    • Kinsella suggests that extreme future title transfers could mimic slavery, potentially justifying bankruptcy-like provisions.

    • Evers references Randy Barnett’s contributions and mentions Marcus Cole’s bankruptcy expertise as relevant to the theory.

  • [00:24:53 – 00:34:55] Bankruptcy, Abandonment, and Inalienability in Punishment

    • Evers expresses discomfort with bankruptcy’s “fresh start” concept, arguing that debts remain owed, and criticizes advice to “walk away” from mortgages during the financial crisis.

    • On abandonment, Evers argues that abandoning hazardous property (e.g., polluted sites) doesn’t absolve responsibility, comparing it to a bullet or landmine causing harm later.

    • They discuss how punishment (e.g., restitution or imprisonment) intersects with inalienability, as compelling action may conflict with the principle that specific performance cannot be enforced.

    • The episode concludes with mutual appreciation and acknowledgment that the title-transfer theory remains underexplored, with room for further scholarly work.

TRANSCRIPT

Interview of Williamson Evers on the Title-Transfer Theory of Contract

Stephan Kinsella and Williamson Evers

August 5, 2014

00:00:01

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Okay, this is Stephan Kinsella.  I’m here with Mr. Williamson Evers who I’ve never met in person, and he has graciously agreed to discuss with me a topic that I’ve been interested in, in a number of years, the title-transfer theory of contract.  And Mr. Evers, how are you doing?

00:00:19

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I’m fine, thank you.  So I’m Bill Evers, Williamson M. Evers.  I’m a Stanford PhD in political science, and I currently am a research fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford.  I was a friend of Murray Rothbard for many years and discussed political theory and philosophy of law questions with him including questions about the law of contracts.  So I think that’s what we’re going to discuss today.

00:01:01

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Absolutely, and I’ll just observe that I’ve been a fan of the Journal of Libertarian Studies, of course, since its inception, and I noticed that I think your article was the very first article every published in the JLS.

00:01:13

WILLIAMSON EVERS: That’s right.  It was the lead article in Volume 1 No. 1.

00:01:19

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Yes, and you’ve had several others.

00:01:20

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Yes, and I was also the managing editor for awhile.

00:01:24

STEPHAN KINSELLA: And I think your article came out in 1977, and I’m a lawyer, and so I’ve written on this topic.  And I’ve been interested in it since I’ve been studying Rothbard and libertarian theory.  And this theory has been fascinating to me for a long time.  My impression, and I’d like to get your impression, is that it’s been – it’s got a lot of potential.  It could have more development, and it’s underappreciated, and I think it’s revolutionary to be honest in legal and libertarian theory.

00:01:54

Just in tracing the genesis of the idea, it appears to me that around 1974 – I think your article came out in ’77 – around ’74, Rothbard had some sketchy thoughts on this in one of his earlier articles.  So my guess has been for awhile that you and Rothbard were discussing this, and you wrote it up into a longer piece, and then Rothbard drew on that in his Ethics if Liberty chapter, which relies heavily upon your 1977 article.  Is that basically what happened?  Do I have that right?

00:02:26

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I think that’s basically right.  So this was a long time ago.  So you and I are talking in 2014.

00:02:37

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Correct.

00:02:37

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I specialize in kindergarten through high school education policy these days, and I’m not writing in this area anymore.

00:02:49

STEPHAN KINSELLA: I understand.

00:02:50

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I’m not saying I would never write in it anymore, but I haven’t for many years.  I wrote, in addition to this article, for the reformulation of the law of contracts.  I also wrote on social contract theory and political thought, and so that’s a related area.  But anyway, I wanted to – your question really is about the genesis of this, and Murray Rothbard and I used to talk on the telephone late at night.  He was kind of a night person, and we would talk quite long times, maybe even hours sometimes.

00:03:33

And so the early days when I knew him, he didn’t really like to travel very much, but he loved to talk on the telephone and have people in his apartment, he and Joey’s apartment in New York City.  But anyway, we used to talk about things, and I was a graduate student in political science at Stanford.  And I had to write papers on various topics, and so I tried to utilize the obligation to write serious papers to also explore things that I thought were underdeveloped in political philosophy of classical liberalism.

00:04:20

And so I did, and I – this is really not something I’m completely certain of, but I believe that I discussed it with Murray Rothbard that certain insights that I found in a very fragmentary way, a very scattered way in different writings of his.  And that he encouraged me to develop these further, and so Stanford has a great law school, a great library.  And I just dug in, and sort of the first thing I realized was that utilitarian ideas about expectations had had a huge impact on the way the law of contracts was discussed.

00:05:14

Like a lot of things, and this is something that you – is reflected in your own writing, there are different ways that sort of – and different ways of approaching a topic that kind of end up with a similar result.  So just because this focus on expectations was there didn’t mean that the law of contract was completely wrong-headed or hopelessly wrong or something like that.  But it meant that it wasn’t thought about in a way that was compatible with a natural-rights, private-property-oriented classical liberalism.

00:05:58

So I looked around, and I found various authors who – I read things on all the different sides of this, and I found out what are the issues, what are the controversies, what are the controversies that are interesting to libertarianism.  And I tried to find out how had previous people thought about and how to press those thoughts on further and try to systematically go through the issues.  And that’s what I did in this article, and Professor Rothbard thought it was a pretty important article, so I used it as a lead piece in the new journal.

00:06:42

STEPHAN KINSELLA: And I agree with that, and when I came across it and Rothbard’s restatement of it in Ethics of Liberty, it sort of blew my mind as a lawyer.  As you saw from my piece, I’m from the civil law tradition in Louisiana, and there they distinguish contractual or conventional obligations as either to do or to give.  So that’s the conventional way of – the typical way of looking at it, and from what I realized from looking at your and Rothbard’s work is that pretty much every conventional legal system and contractual system can be boiled down to really an obligation to give, which is really not an obligation to give.

00:07:26

It’s just a transfer of ownership of property.  So to me, this whole approach rests upon an essential insight that all rights are property rights and that all property rights are rights in scarce resources.  And the right of ownership is the right to control it, and one of the aspects of that is the right to convey the title to someone else.  And that’s really what contracts are.  I mean is that the basic approach that you would agree with?

00:07:55

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Yes, but I do think we have to be careful about include the right to convey because I think that the natural rights tradition in classical liberalism says that you can’t sell yourself.

00:08:18

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Correct.

00:08:18

WILLIAMSON EVERS: You can’t sell yourself into slavery.  Now, you could – let’s say you found a guru or a religious figure, or you joined a monastery whether it was absolute rule by the head of the monastery.  You could dedicate yourself in a sense.  You could make yourself servile, but you couldn’t – they couldn’t hold you to it.

00:08:47

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Exactly.

00:08:48

WILLIAMSON EVERS: They couldn’t enforce a contract.  They couldn’t hold you captive as a slave legitimately in terms of natural rights libertarian philosophy.  So – and the whole superstructure of libertarian philosophy of law is built on dealing with the situation of free human beings in a society with scarce resources, as you said.  And so you are then – that superstructure, the rest of it, the conveying the alienable property, you can’t sort of take that superstructure and use it to destroy the foundation, which is the free person operating in the material reality of the world.  So I just – it’s like you’re out on the limb, which is the superstructure.  You can’t really destroy the trunk or the roots and say, oh, well, that was a legitimate move.

00:09:57

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Right, and which is why my…

00:10:01

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I hope your listeners haven’t gotten lost in the metaphor, but all I’m saying is…

00:10:05

STEPHAN KINSELLA: No, my listeners love this kind of stuff, so that’s fine.  My feeble attempt to build on your work and Rothbard’s was, in my article, one reason I thought I had to deal with the whole inalienability issue was because of exactly what you’re talking about.  I don’t know if you agree with all of that approach, but it seems to me that we have to treat property rights in one’s body, which is euphemistically or metaphorically called self-ownership sometimes.  We have to treat that differently than the acquisition of property rights in scarce resources that are previously unowned.

00:10:42

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I agree with that.  I agree with that.  So I did have some differences with your paper, but I thought it was a serious paper.  And I’m not so sectarian as to condemn you to outer darkness or something over the differences because I think it’s a very interesting article that you wrote.  I have some thoughts on different aspects of it, which I’d be glad to make the focus of the rest of our discussion.  But I just want to mention to listeners to this that, again, this is not the area in which I’m doing research and writing today, but I can recall what I think and thought about it.

00:11:29

So as I went through it, I thought, first of all, you’re kind of recapitulating what Professor Rothbard and I – Murray Rothbard and I had to say, but you’re also partly talking about your foundational views of what justifies libertarian philosophy.  And you’re, I guess, attracted to the argumentation ideas of Hans Hoppe.  Am I correct in that?

00:12:02

STEPHAN KINSELLA: It is, but I don’t think these ideas rely upon that.

00:12:06

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Right.  I don’t think they do either, and so I wouldn’t want to state that.  I myself – I am more of a Aristotelian Thomist in the way that Professor Rothbard liked to modify that and the way that Doug Rasmussen and Den Uyl set this forward.  I think that is pretty good.  Similarly, Henry Veatch is another man that I think highly of.  But I don’t oppose the argumentation idea, which has a kind of a more Kantian cast to it.

00:12:46

It was, I think, developed very well by James – Father Sadowsky, James Sadowsky, and Professor Rothbard also liked it.  And I view that as not in conflict with an Aristotelian-Thomas specification of property rights and of human liberty, individual liberty.  And so we’re not antagonistic, but I just thought I would say that I think they’re compatible, but I think – I find one is more of a thin justification, and the other is more of a thick one, and I’m just more comfortable with it.  That’s the thick one, but I…

00:13:28

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Which one?  Oh, the thick one

00:13:28

WILLIAMSON EVERS: But I also think in arguing with other people it’s good to have at your disposal a thin one because it’s easier to talk to people.  It’s just kind of a – what political philosophers call an imminent critique because you’re saying to somebody, well, if you think that you can do this, how can you even say that you think people should do this if you don’t own yourself in order to open your mouth?

00:14:02

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Exactly.

00:14:02

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Kind of thing.  And so that’s sort of – in caricatured form, the essence of the argumentation argument.  And I think at a minimum it ought to make people pause.  So I think it’s good, but I just think I want to kind of go deeper.  Now, I think you make a good point that Professor Rothbard and I seem very stand-offish about the word or term promises.  And we’re very – you use the phrase that we’re fixated on it.

00:14:40

STEPHAN KINSELLA: That was probably too harsh.

00:14:41

WILLIAMSON EVERS: We’re kind of writing in reaction.

00:14:44

STEPHAN KINSELLA: I understand.

00:14:45

WILLIAMSON EVERS: To legal theorists that made a lot out of mere promises.

00:14:51

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Exactly.

00:14:52

WILLIAMSON EVERS: But I think you’re quite right in saying that if the substantive effect and intent of a promise is to convey title, then it’s quite a good contract, and it would be so under libertarian thinking.

00:15:11

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Right.

00:15:11

WILLIAMSON EVERS: So I – and that is your point, and I agree with it, but I mean I also think, and you’re kind of in our conversation here acknowledging that you’re understanding that we were reacting…

00:15:25

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Of course.

00:15:26

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Against this kind of cavalier, breezy use of promises.

00:15:30

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Of course.

00:15:31

WILLIAMSON EVERS: With quite a substantive effect in the people that we were arguing against.

00:15:37

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Of course, and I’m happy to let you talk about any of this, but my point was not to get you to comment on my paper.  My paper is just an indication of my interest in this topic, and I’m really interested in a few things about – I don’t know if you’ve paid attention to or if you recall some of these – the little minutia…

00:15:59

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I don’t know where we…

00:16:01

STEPHAN KINSELLA: I’m sorry.  I’m sorry about that.  I don’t know what happened, but we got cut off, but I’ll fix it.

00:16:05

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Okay, so what was I saying when we stopped here?

00:16:10

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Well, I was – I’m trying to remember.  I’m sorry.  I was distracted myself.  But what I was saying was I just wanted to ask you a couple of things that have stood out to me in this debate.  First, I wanted to get your impression…

00:16:24

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Well, did you hear me saying that – let’s see now.  We talked about the promises thing, right?

00:16:35

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Yes.

00:16:37

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Okay, so then I wanted to go, and before I did it, I wanted to say that I appreciate – once again, I appreciate you writing the article.  I think it’s a serious article, and just because we have differences doesn’t mean I’m condemning you.

00:16:56

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Well, I don’t…

00:16:57

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Personally.  But anyway, the first thing I wanted to discuss was this issue about the existence of something that might be owed in the future.

00:17:09

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Exactly, and I actually did want to turn to that.  I wanted to kind of get your impression on that.

00:17:13

WILLIAMSON EVERS: So I wanted you to kind of state your view, and then I would react to it.

00:17:20

STEPHAN KINSELLA: And that’s fine, and let me be clear.  I wanted to get your views.  I really wasn’t trying to seek your commentary on my article.  I’m happy to – if you want to use that as a framework, and that’s fine.  But I was trying to talk to you about what you’ve written, and I wanted to get your insight about the process and what your thoughts are on the development of this theory and how much is left to be developed.  And believe me, I’m not a critic.  I’m a huge fan of your work.  I think there’s something to be developed, so I wasn’t trying to be critical in my article.  There’s a few things I was trying to…

00:17:54

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Well, I think Randy Barnett, although he’s – this has not been the major focus of his writings, he has made additional contributions on it.

00:18:07

STEPHAN KINSELLA: I agree completely.

00:18:07

WILLIAMSON EVERS: And I think that that’s another person who has written on this, but in the sense you’re right that there hasn’t been a lot written on it.  I wonder – there’s also a professor at Stanford named Marcus Cole, who’s an expert on bankruptcy.  And I have not explored that much of his writings on this, and I don’t know how much he draws on this.  He’s certainly familiar with Randy Barnett.  I don’t know if he knows about my writings on this I think, but anyway.

00:18:46

STEPHAN KINSELLA: I’d be happy to look into it.

00:18:47

WILLIAMSON EVERS: He might – I mean obviously bankruptcy is strongly related to contract.  And it’s related to this issue that we’re talking about now, which is whether someone who is called upon to perform or transfer something in the future, whether – if that thing is not in existence, what is the status of the contract.  So I mean my view is that if you commit it to something that’s a legitimate contract, even if you don’t have it, let’s say you’re supposed to have a certain amount of money to give to somebody in the future, and you don’t have it.

00:19:31

That doesn’t – it’s still a valid contract, and if you’re not – if you don’t have it or you’re withholding it or hiding it somewhere or something, that’s – or you give it to your best friend at the last minute, it’s still a valid contract, and you owe the person a money.  So then part of the question that arises is, well, if it’s a kind of theft, why couldn’t you be put in debtor’s prison or…

00:20:12

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Exactly, exactly.

00:20:13

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Why shouldn’t you be?  And I think that’s a very valid question to raise.  But I think, and I know from your writing that you’re not on the side of this, but I still think, and I’m – again, I’m open to argument on all this except for the fact that I’m not writing on it anymore.  So – but anyway, I think there are gradations.  Just as in robbery, there’s robbery of your house when you’re not there, and there’s robbery when you’re there.  There’s – in the streets there’s robbery with a gun on you, and there’s robbery where they just snatch and grab.

00:20:55

So I think just as there’s that, there’s different kinds of thefts, and there’s lesser and greater theft.  And that would be disproportional to the amount of intention that’s involved and so forth.  This all affects the gravity of what has been done to you.  I’m talking about you, the victim, who didn’t get paid back.  So that’s part of why I don’t favor debtor’s prison, and I think no one can speak for Murray Rothbard anymore, but I think that similar ideas figured in his thinking.

00:21:35

Again, I just think particularly with specific unique items, the idea is very troubling because let’s say you have the Mona Lisa, and you sold it to me, but the delivery is supposed to be in the future.  So at the last minute I give it to somebody else.  That’s crazy.  You have to be still liable to turn over the thing that you owe.  So I’m not – I mean I’m kind of flippantly giving this example, and it’s a much more subtle topic.  But anyway, that’s my view.

00:22:27

Now, there’s another issue that you don’t really get into very much but I think is a complicated one for this theory.  And it is an area that deserves additional research program on anybody who writes on this in the future, and that is the slavery equivalent, onerous-damages issue.  So the examples, I agree to sing.  I’m an opera singer, and I agree to sing in the San Francisco Opera, and then when the time comes, I don’t show up.  I’m off drunk somewhere or something, whatever.  So – or I just decide I don’t want to do it.

00:23:12

So can somebody compel a specific performance?  Well, you and I both agree no, they can’t.  But now what about a performance bond of some sort?  So I put forth some – in the contract made with me to come and do the singing.  I say, well, if I don’t show up, I owe $5000 or $7000, some number that’s maybe even more than what I was going to be paid, but it would be enough to make me want to show up there.

00:23:52

Now, the question is what if it were $1 trillion?  Okay, or something huge?  Now, you might say, well, of course I, the opera singer, don’t have the 1 trillion, so that’s – maybe you take care of it.  But if someone doesn’t agree with you, is there another problem here?  And the question might be is it the equivalent to slavery?  Is the burden so – like I will chop off your leg or I will – I’m not killing you, and I’m not – whatever, but something that is so onerous that it makes it equivalent to slavery.  And I don’t – because I’m not writing in this I don’t have a quick answer.  But I do think that this is an area that deserves further research, further writing, sensible writing.

00:24:52

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Well, I have…

00:24:53

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I think it’s a realistic issue.

00:24:57

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Well, the way I’ve interpreted your theory and Rothbard’s in my Misesian/Rothbardian/Hoppian way is that it’s all about transfer of title.  And theoretically you could engage in a future title transfer, which – say, to a debtor, which basically transfers every piece of property that you ever acquire forever, even a piece of food going into your mouth.  And if you did that, it would be equivalent or tantamount to a type of slavery.  And so maybe some argument like that could be used to justify some type of bankruptcy type of provision, which I think is getting at the same insight that you’re talking about here.

00:25:39

WILLIAMSON EVERS: But I don’t – so I am uncomfortable with this idea that you could convey everything including every morsel of food and drink of water.

00:25:51

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Correct.

00:25:52

WILLIAMSON EVERS: For the future.  But anyway, that point that we’re both getting at is that this is an area that deserves further exploration, and so I am uncomfortable with the whole idea of bankruptcy.  And this is why maybe Marcus Cole has something to contribute or other future people that maybe aren’t born yet.  Who knows?

00:26:15

So generally the idea of bankruptcy is you say I can’t pay, and I want to start over.  And the law makes various provisions, and it might make a homestead exemption and whatever, whatever.  I am not really comfortable with that.  I think you still owe the money, and you can’t just get out of it, and I’m really troubled.  There are people, even people that might claim they’re libertarians, who want to – I sound like I’m getting into a big heresy hunt here.  But during the last financial crisis with all the homes going into foreclosure and things like that, there were people going around advocating that people who were having trouble paying their mortgages just walk away.  Walk away.  You’ll be better off.

00:27:22

STEPHAN KINSELLA: That’s the title of Doug French’s book I think, right?

00:27:24

WILLIAMSON EVERS: You’re so-called…

00:27:25

STEPHAN KINSELLA: I think that’s the title of his book, Walk Away.

00:27:29

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Yeah.  Anyway, the point is they were telling people even though you’ve made this contract, you’ve made this money, now you’re under water, as the phrase goes.  Just walk away.  And the system has already built into it an expectation that a certain number of people will walk away, so do it.  I don’t agree with that.  I think that’s wrong…

00:27:55

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Let me…

00:27:56

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Anyway, so that’s an area that I think needs – and again, I’m not writing in this area, but I – it troubles me and seems to be against libertarian values.  But I’m open to argument as I am with everything.

00:28:18

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Well, it seems to me that the terms of the contract matter, and the terms of the contract that would be in force in a free society matters because the terms of the contracts in today’s law may be influenced by the political climate and the laws that exist.  So it’s hard to have a pristine approach to this, but let me – if you don’t mind, let me get your opinion.

00:28:41

WILLIAMSON EVERS: So one of the other things that you try to address some of that is you pose different – you could have additional provisions to provide for the case in which the person doesn’t have the money.  And in a way you’re kind of – as I said at the beginning of this interview, you’re trying to get back to the point that you don’t really want people to get off scot-free without doing what they owe.  And so you are trying to kind of recover this to some extent.

00:29:16

STEPHAN KINSELLA: I’m trying to get…

00:29:17

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I wanted to also…

00:29:18

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Go ahead.  Go ahead.  Sorry, go ahead.

00:29:20

WILLIAMSON EVERS: I also wanted to compliment you.  I thought you had done a good statement of the abandonment issue.  So this is a potentially tricky issue because – okay, I’ve got to turn this off.  I have to turn you off and talk to you later.  Okay.

00:29:46

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Take your time.  You were talking about the abandonment issue.

00:29:48

WILLIAMSON EVERS: And this is related to a lot of what we’ve been talking about, so if you can acquire property and do it through systematically making it part of your projects and the phrase that you often used is homestead it, you also have to be able – so you’re marking it.  You’re setting out boundaries.  You’re systematically mixing labor with it and so forth.

00:30:15

You also have to be able to abandon it, so this is complicated because you have to make an objective, recognizable, overt thing showing your intent.  It’s a little bit tricky, and this is another area where further writing needs to be done on this.  So let’s take the Love Canal case.  Okay, this is sort of not as bad as was shown in Reason magazine many years ago.  The government was all mixed up in it, but we’ll just call it some pollution thing.  So you’ve created this pollution thing, and then you walk away.

00:31:08

Now, maybe nobody occupies it, but let’s say it bubbles over, or it’s emitting harmful rays, or it’s somehow has a some kind of geyser effect, and it’s spraying out into the atmosphere and falling on other people.  Can you just abandon it and say this is not my property anymore?  I don’t think so.  It’s just like I shoot a bullet.  Well, in a way I’ve abandoned the bullet, but the bullet keeps going and it hits somewhere.

00:31:44

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Or you plant a landmine or something like that that explodes ten years later, and it kills someone.  Exactly.  There’s a causal responsibility.

00:31:53

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Okay.  But anyway there’s room for more writing and thinking about this.

00:31:57

STEPHAN KINSELLA: I agree completely.

00:31:58

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Then I think you get in – interestingly into the issue of inalienability and punishment.  And so to explain this a little further, so let’s say we’re in agreement that there’s – that people are inalienable.  They can’t sell themselves, but their material goods may be intellectual goods.  This is another whole topic that I don’t want to get into.  But anyway there are material goods that are alienable and that people are transferring titles to and so forth.

00:32:37

But now let’s say you commit a crime.  Okay, in punishing you, a restitution effort might take what you have, or it might compel you to do something to restore to the other person, or it might imprison you, especially if it’s a retributive-punishment approach.  And libertarians are divided among – classical liberals are divided among different punishment theories, but certainly the most common are restoration or – and retribution I think and balance the scales of justice.

00:33:28

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Rectification, rectifying the situation.

00:33:30

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Right, rectifying in various ways.  So this might impinge on the idea that you are inalienable and that people can’t compel specific performance from you.

00:33:43

STEPHAN KINSELLA: I agree.

00:33:44

WILLIAMSON EVERS: So I think this issue, which you raise, is one that needs further discussion.  And so I think that’s an area that…

00:33:59

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Well, let me – if you don’t mind, let me ask you…

00:34:02

WILLIAMSON EVERS: So I’m kind of through my thoughts on the whole thing, and I do need call back the person that was calling me there.

00:34:11

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Let me thank you for taking your time to speak with me, and I really appreciate what you’ve done.  And I don’t know if you’re interested, but I’d be happy to speak with you just personally in the future if you’re interested.  I really appreciate what you’ve done in the past, and I think it’s a great endeavor.  And so I will thank you for your time.  And I will let you go, and I will send you a copy of everything, and we can talk about it before anything goes public.

00:34:41

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Okay, well, I authorize you to post this in whatever form you want to.

00:34:48

STEPHAN KINSELLA: Thank you, Mr. Evers.  I appreciate it.  Nice talking to you in person.

00:34:52

WILLIAMSON EVERS: Thank you.  I enjoyed it also.  Bye-bye.

00:34:55

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KOL145 | Peace, Love and Liberty Radio

Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 145.

From Episode 87 of PPL Radio:

Join Darryl W. Perry on Peace, Love, Liberty Radio as he brings you news, views and opinions while promoting the ideas of peaceful interaction. The show is live from the LRN.FM studio in Keene, the Shire, Sundays 3-5pm (Eastern).
Your calls are welcome at 603-435-1105
A response to Ann Coulter :: NJ school to students: return your laptops to be destroyed :: Florida Judge tells legislature to redraw districts :: Stephan Kinsella joins the show to discuss intellectual property, the history of copyright and patents, and his path to liberty

 

 

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KOL144 | Corbett Report Radio (2012)

Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 144.

I was a guest back in Mar. 28, 2012  on The Corbett Report, with host James Corbett (from Japan), discussing IP. From his description:

Writer, thinker, lawyer and Austro-anarchist libertarian legal theorist Stephan Kinsella joins us to discuss his writing on intellectual property. We discuss the philosophical roots of property rights, how IP differs from those concepts, and how alternative models of making money from creative work are being pioneered in the age of the internet.

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KOL143 | Liberty Conspiracy with Gardner Goldsmith (2012)

Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 143.

Sigh. Yes, IP, as usual.

I was a guest on Mar. 26, 2012 on Liberty Conspiracy, with host Gardner Goldsmith, discussing IP and related libertarian matters.

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Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 142.

I was a guest on HMS-TV, Feb. 23, 2012, 6:30-7:30 pm CST (Houston’s Public Affairs Public Access Live program), with host David Hutzelman. We discussed IP, SOPA, etc. We tried to find a local intelligent and civil pro-IP libertarian or Objectivist to debate me, but no luck (no surprise: There Are No Good Arguments for IP).

The video is available on YouTube here, and streamed below.

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KOL141 | FreeTalkLive: IP and SOPA (2012)

Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 141.

This is from the Jan. 22, 2012 FreeTalkLive in which I was a guest, discussing intellectual property and SOPA. I was on for two hours on FreeTalkLive (1-22-12 show), with hosts Mark Edge and Stephanie. We discussed intellectual property and SOPA.

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KOL140 | Liberty Underground Radio (2012)

Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 140.

As noted here, I was a guest Jan. 20, 2012 on the Liberty Underground Radio Show on the 1787 Radio Network, discussing IP for about 25 minutes. The reason they invited me on was the hosts, in discussing SOPA and PIPA in the Dec. 31, 2011 show (hour 1, starting about 10 minutes in), had a dispute about IP. Although the main host questioning me was on the fence about IP, he was open-minded, fair, and civil, and I think he moved a bit in the anti-IP direction by the end.

The show has a podcast (feed) and my segment was on the second hour, starting at about 25:25 (audio).

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Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 139. 

Albert Lu interviewed me for his Power and Market podcast, posted July 29, 2014. Unlike most interviews, we talked about education, career choices, and related matters. This is an edited version of a longer interview. The longer one can be obtained by requesting access here.

Other Kinsella biographical material.

Lu’s description for the longer interview (which will be posted anon):

Interview Highlights

In this interview, Stephan speaks directly to prospective law students, internet entrepreneurs, and technology capitalists about the practice of law and the dangerous world of intellectual property.
We also took time to discuss his own academic career and his multiple transitions from engineering student, to lawyer, to proprietor and independent scholar.

This was a fun interview and reminds me of reason I began this project in the first place.

Grok shownotes, episode summary, and transcript below:

SHOWNOTES FROM GROK:

 

Power and Market Report: Show Notes with Stephan Kinsella

[0:00]In this engaging episode of the Power and Market Report, host Albert Lu interviews Stephan Kinsella, a patent attorney and prominent anti-intellectual property (IP) theorist, from his home in Houston, Texas [1:09]. Kinsella shares his journey from a science enthusiast in rural Louisiana to earning degrees in electrical engineering and law, driven by a passion for both hard sciences and legal theory [1:20]. He discusses how market incentives and personal adaptability shaped his career, emphasizing the importance of optimism and flexibility for young people navigating their professional paths [6:25]. The conversation delves into practical IP concerns, particularly around domain names and trademarks, with Kinsella advising entrepreneurs to conduct thorough trademark searches to avoid legal disputes [10:32].

The discussion also explores the inefficiencies of the IP system, which Kinsella critiques as a “cancer” on the free market, forcing businesses to hire lawyers for unnecessary protections [15:19]. He clarifies the distinctions between copyright, trademark, patent, and trade secret, noting that short titles like “Power and Market” are not copyrightable but may require trademark consideration [19:26]. Kinsella wraps up by sharing productivity tools like j2.com for online faxing and SugarSync for file synchronization, invaluable for his law practice [21:17]. The episode concludes with contact information for Kinsella and an invitation for listeners to access bonus content at powerandmarket.com/bonus [23:57], offering a blend of personal insights, legal advice, and libertarian perspectives on IP and entrepreneurship.

 

Power and Market Report: Detailed Show Notes with Stephan Kinsella

This episode of the Power and Market Report, hosted by Albert Lu, features Stephan Kinsella, a patent attorney and anti-intellectual property theorist, recorded on July 29, 2014. Below is a detailed summary of the conversation, segmented into blocks of approximately 5 to 15 minutes, with bullet points, time markers, and enriched descriptions including examples, illustrations, and anecdotes. Each segment provides a deep dive into the topics discussed, tailored for engaging show notes.

Segment 1: Introduction and Kinsella’s Background (0:00–6:25, ~6.5 minutes)

The episode kicks off with Albert Lu setting the stage from the “Bayou State” (Louisiana), introducing the Power and Market Report as a platform exploring liberty and entrepreneurship. He welcomes Stephan Kinsella, a Houston-based patent attorney with a twist: Kinsella is a leading critic of intellectual property (IP), arguing it’s both unjust and nonexistent. Lu paints a vivid picture of Kinsella’s journey, from a small-town Louisiana kid tinkering with electronics to earning advanced degrees in electrical engineering and law. The conversation dives into Kinsella’s early life, where his curiosity for science and philosophy shaped his path. He shares nostalgic anecdotes about dismantling radios and getting shocked, illustrating his hands-on approach to learning, and reflects on the less structured college selection process of his era compared to today’s hyper-competitive landscape.

  • [0:00] Albert Lu opens the show with enthusiasm, broadcasting from Louisiana, and introduces Stephan Kinsella as a guest who blends legal expertise with a radical anti-IP stance. He frames the episode around the “business of liberty,” setting an engaging tone for entrepreneurs and liberty enthusiasts.
  • [0:29] Lu provides a detailed biography: Kinsella grew up near Baton Rouge, earned a bachelor’s and master’s in electrical engineering at LSU, and later pursued a JD (1991) and LLM (1992). He’s a registered patent attorney but also an independent scholar who challenges IP’s legitimacy, famously arguing in his writings that patents and copyrights stifle innovation. For example, Kinsella’s book Against Intellectual Property posits that IP laws create monopolies that harm creators more than they help.
  • [1:20] Lu prompts Kinsella to share his pre-college interests, sparking a lively discussion about his childhood fascination with science and philosophy. Kinsella recalls reading pseudoscience books on pyramid power and exploring religious ideas, showing his broad curiosity.
  • [1:43] Kinsella dives into his love for technology, sharing an anecdote about taking apart televisions and radios as a kid, often getting shocked in the process. He explains choosing electrical engineering at LSU because it was practical and interesting, contrasting his era’s casual college selection—flipping through a catalog—with today’s SAT prep and campus tours. For instance, he picked his major simply because he liked computers, a decision that felt intuitive rather than calculated.
  • [3:06] Kinsella describes his college years at LSU as fascinating, but after job offers from General Dynamics and Schlumberger, he opted for grad school to delay entering the workforce. His girlfriend (now wife) was still in school, and a quasi-recession prompted him to stay in academia. He shares how his dissatisfaction with engineering’s mechanical focus led him to legal theory, sparked by writing libertarian articles for the school newspaper and friends urging him to attend law school because he loved to argue.

This opening segment introduces Kinsella’s unique blend of technical and legal expertise, rooted in a curious childhood and a pragmatic approach to education. His anecdotes about tinkering with electronics and navigating college choices highlight a relatable journey shaped by passion and opportunity, setting the stage for deeper discussions on IP and entrepreneurship.

Segment 2: Career Choices and Market Influences (6:25–10:03, ~3.5 minutes)

This shorter segment bridges Kinsella’s personal story with practical advice, focusing on how market incentives and personal choices shape careers. Lu reflects on the uncertainty of youth—how 17-year-olds often don’t know their calling—and asks if it’s beneficial for the market to guide career paths. Kinsella shares a thoughtful perspective, drawing from his own experience and his role as a parent to an 11-year-old son. He illustrates with an analogy: career choices are like an “embarrassment of riches,” where intelligent people must narrow down abundant options. He recounts his lower-middle-class upbringing, where optimism and supportive parents fueled his confidence, and uses vivid examples, like ruling out unrealistic careers (e.g., basketball for the short), to underscore the need for adaptability and realistic ambition in a market-driven world.

  • [6:25] Lu poses a philosophical question: is it good that the market often chooses careers for young people, given that at 17, most are unsure of their path? He notes how market incentives like prestige and earnings guide choices, using his own engineering background as an example. Kinsella agrees, suggesting that competent, hardworking individuals are suited for many roles, likening career selection to choosing from a vast menu.
  • [6:46] Kinsella reflects on advising his 11-year-old son, noting that today’s career planning is more systematic than in his youth. He illustrates with a contrast: while his college decision was a casual flip through a catalog, his son’s generation faces intense planning. He emphasizes that early choices, like a college major or first job, shape future paths, guided by market signals like job demand for engineers in the 1980s.
  • [7:55] Kinsella shares a personal anecdote about growing up in rural Louisiana, where his supportive parents and optimism were key. He recalls never doubting he’d succeed, reinforced by good grades and job offers. He uses a humorous example: you can’t be a Romanian translator without knowing the language or a basketball star if you’re a foot tall, illustrating the need for realistic goals. He advocates for adaptability, citing successful peers who pivoted when opportunities arose, like an engineer turned lawyer seizing a niche in patent law.

This concise segment explores the interplay of market forces and personal agency in career paths, enriched by Kinsella’s relatable stories and analogies. His emphasis on optimism, adaptability, and realistic ambition resonates with listeners navigating their own professional journeys, paving the way for practical IP advice.

Segment 3: Domain Names and Trademarks (10:03–15:01, ~5 minutes)

The conversation takes a practical turn as Lu, role-playing an online entrepreneur, seeks Kinsella’s advice on choosing domain names without running afoul of trademark law. Kinsella delivers a clear, cautionary explanation of how trademark law intersects with internet domains, using vivid examples like Madonna.com and the Ron Paul campaign’s domain dispute to illustrate potential pitfalls. He paints a picture of a legal landscape where powerful entities can bully smaller players, sharing an anecdote about the disheartening Ron Paul case to highlight IP’s misuse. Kinsella’s advice is actionable yet critical, warning entrepreneurs to consult trademark lawyers and secure backup domains, while subtly weaving in his anti-IP stance by comparing trademark disputes to market distortions.

  • [10:03] Lu, acting as an entrepreneur launching a product, asks if using domain names with trademarked words is risky. Kinsella responds affirmatively, explaining that trademark law, embedded in international and internet regulations, poses significant challenges. He uses the analogy of a minefield: choosing a domain without checking trademarks is like stepping blindly into legal trouble.
  • [10:32] Kinsella elaborates with a striking example: a domain like Madonna.com could be seized by the celebrity via WIPO’s Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP), even if used innocently (e.g., for a motherhood-related site). He shares an anecdote about the Ron Paul campaign’s attempt to take RonPaul.com from a supporter, calling it “disheartening” and illustrating how IP laws enable bullying. He notes that such disputes often ignore whether fraud occurred, skewing toward the powerful.
  • [12:40] Lu asks if trademark searches must be international. Kinsella confirms, explaining that domains are global, requiring WIPO and comprehensive searches. He cites an example of Apple losing a trademark in Mexico, showing that even giants struggle to secure worldwide rights. He compares it to trying to lock every door in a global house—nearly impossible without vast resources.
  • [13:22] Lu brings up the Washington Redskins’ trademark invalidation for being offensive. Kinsella predicts they’ll regain it on appeal but explains that losing a trademark doesn’t bar using the name, only exclusive control. He illustrates with a scenario: without trademark protection, anyone can sell Redskins t-shirts, potentially flooding the market. He speculates the NFL might force a name change to maintain monopoly control, showing how private rules can amplify IP’s impact.

This segment offers a practical guide to navigating trademark risks for domain names, enriched with real-world examples and anecdotes that highlight the complexities and abuses of IP law. Kinsella’s advice is both actionable and critical, appealing to entrepreneurs while subtly advancing his anti-IP philosophy.

Segment 4: Copyright, Trademark, and IP Critique (15:01–20:59, ~6 minutes)

Lu shifts to copyright concerns, asking if a domain like PowerAndMarket.com could face issues, prompting Kinsella to unpack the distinctions between IP types with clarity and depth. He uses analogies, like comparing copyright to a novel’s text versus a title’s brevity, to demystify legal nuances. Kinsella shares a hypothetical about writing a sci-fi novel called “Titanic” to illustrate copyright’s limits, and his critique of the IP system as a “cancer” on the free market comes alive with a vivid comparison to tax law’s inefficiencies. He recounts how businesses are forced to hire lawyers for unneeded protections, using the analogy of paying for an umbrella in a desert. The segment ties practical advice to Kinsella’s libertarian philosophy, making it both educational and provocative.

  • [15:01] Lu asks if a domain like PowerAndMarket.com could be copyrighted, reflecting a common entrepreneurial concern. Kinsella clarifies the four IP types: patent (inventions), trademark (brand identifiers), copyright (creative expressions), and trade secret (confidential info). He explains that domains don’t involve patents or trade secrets, and copyright doesn’t apply to short titles, using the analogy of a book’s cover versus its contents.
  • [15:44] Kinsella illustrates with an example: the movie Titanic doesn’t own the word “Titanic.” A sci-fi novel about an asteroid called “Titanic” wouldn’t violate copyright because titles are too brief for protection. For PowerAndMarket.com, he advises checking USPTO’s TESS for trademark conflicts, suggesting a trademark filing to preempt issues. He shares a tip: entrepreneurs should view trademarks as a shield, not a sword, to protect their brand.
  • [17:18] Kinsella critiques the IP system, arguing it forces businesses to hire lawyers for protections they wouldn’t need in a free market. He uses a powerful analogy: IP and tax laws are like cancers, creating wasteful industries like patent and tax attorneys, just as cancer creates a need for oncologists. He recounts how clients spend thousands on trademark filings to avoid disputes, likening it to buying an umbrella for a desert—costly and often unnecessary.
  • [19:26] Lu confirms “Power and Market” isn’t trademarked, referencing its similarity to Murray Rothbard’s book title, and asks if he should trademark it. Kinsella notes that book titles aren’t copyrighted and doubts it’s trademarked as a brand. He shares an anecdote about advising clients to file trademarks defensively, suggesting Lu consider it for podcast services to secure his brand, with minimal risk from Rothbard’s estate.

This segment blends practical IP advice with a scathing critique of the system, using analogies and hypotheticals to make complex legal concepts accessible. Kinsella’s libertarian lens and vivid examples, like the “cancer” of IP law, engage listeners while equipping entrepreneurs with actionable insights.

Segment 5: Productivity Tools and Closing (20:59–24:35, ~3.5 minutes)

The episode wraps up with a practical and personal touch as Lu asks Kinsella to share productivity tools for his law practice, offering listeners actionable tips for their own businesses. Kinsella enthusiastically recommends j2.com for faxing and SugarSync for file syncing, sharing an anecdote about faxing’s stubborn persistence in legal work to add humor. He paints a picture of a busy attorney juggling multiple devices, with SugarSync as a lifesaver for seamless file access. The segment closes with contact details and Lu’s warm sign-off, teasing a future in-person discussion and directing listeners to bonus content. The conversational tone and relatable insights make this a fitting, engaging conclusion.

  • [20:59] Lu asks for a productivity tool, appealing to listeners running home-based businesses. Kinsella recommends j2.com, an online fax service he’s used for a decade, sharing a humorous anecdote about faxing’s outdated but persistent role in law. He explains how emailing documents to j2.com’s system simplifies faxing, with free and affordable paid options.
  • [22:16] Kinsella praises SugarSync.com for syncing folders across devices (Mac, iPad, Windows), comparing it to Dropbox but better. He shares a scenario: updating a client file on his laptop, and SugarSync instantly syncs it to his desktop and cloud, saving time. He also mentions Carbonite for backups, illustrating his tech stack for a paperless practice.
  • [23:19] Lu asks how to contact Kinsella. He directs listeners to stephankinsella.com for his email and NSKinsella handles on Facebook and Skype, noting his first name is Norman but he goes by Stephan. He shares a light-hearted story about his unique spelling causing confusion, making his online presence memorable.
  • [23:57] Lu thanks Kinsella, noting the hour-and-a-half discussion felt like minutes and proposing a part two in person. He signs off, directing listeners to powerandmarket.com/bonus for free content, and confirms the date as July 29 (likely 2014), leaving listeners eager for more.

This final segment delivers practical productivity tips enriched with Kinsella’s relatable anecdotes, making it highly actionable for entrepreneurs. The warm closing and promise of bonus content leave listeners inspired and connected, capping off a dynamic episode blending legal insights and libertarian thought.

 

Transcript cleaned up by Grok

Power and Market Report with Stephan Kinsella

Hosted by Albert Lu, this episode features Stephan Kinsella, a patent attorney and anti-intellectual property theorist. Recorded on July 29, 2014.

Intro

[0:00]
Albert Lu: Broadcasting from the Bayou State, this is the Power and Market Report, exploring the business of liberty. Albert Lu here with guest Stephan Kinsella. Thanks for joining me for another installment of the Power and Market Report, a show about the state, entrepreneurs, and their tireless pursuit of human liberty.

[0:23] [Music]

[0:27] [Applause]

[0:29]
Albert Lu: Raised in a small town near Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Stephan Kinsella pursued an early interest in the applied sciences at Louisiana State University, where he earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree in electrical engineering. During this period, he discovered a passion for legal theory and wasted no time. He received a JD in 1991, an LLM in 1992, and has been a registered patent attorney ever since. There is, however, a twist. Mr. Kinsella is also an independent scholar and a leading anti-intellectual property theorist. In his many publications, he argues that not only are intellectual property laws unjust, but intellectual property itself does not exist. He joins me today from his home in Houston, Texas.

[1:13] [Music]

Education

[1:20]
Albert Lu: Let’s pick it up just before you went to college. You studied engineering. You’re well-educated, with a bachelor’s, master’s, JD, and LLM. You must have had an interest in the hard sciences coming out of high school.

[1:43]
Stephan Kinsella: Absolutely. Science was always my interest, along with philosophy. As a young kid, I loved reading pseudoscience books—pyramid power, that sort of thing—and exploring religion. I was fascinated by technology and science. I used to take apart televisions and radios, trying to figure out how they worked, even as a young kid before I had any systematic knowledge. I’d get shocked sometimes, but it was all part of the learning process. When it came time to go to college, I assumed I’d attend because I did well in school. I got scholarship offers from LSU and other universities, and it seemed natural to major in something practical and interesting. Engineering, math, and science fit that bill, and I knew I could build a good career. Back then, it wasn’t like today with guidance counselors and competitive college tours. You were a smart kid, you went to college, got a scholarship, and figured it out.

[3:06]
Stephan Kinsella: I flipped through the LSU catalog to choose my major and picked Electrical and Computer Engineering because I liked computers. It was a simple decision, not systematic at all. I loved all four years of studying electrical engineering at LSU—it was fascinating. I got job offers from General Dynamics and Schlumberger right after my bachelor’s degree, but I wasn’t ready to join the workforce. My girlfriend, now my wife, was still in school, so I decided to go to grad school to wait out a quasi-recession and have more time to decide my path. I was always a bit dissatisfied with the restricted nature of science and engineering—it’s so mechanical and mathematical, shunning normative topics like history, philosophy, and arguing. Those fascinated me, so I started writing and debating libertarian topics in the school newspaper. People kept saying, “You like to argue, you should go to law school.” So, I looked into it. My friends thought I’d make more money as a lawyer, which turned out to be true. My mother used to say I should be a lawyer because I argued so much, though I’m not sure it was a compliment.

[4:49]
Stephan Kinsella: Litigators argue professionally, but I’m not a litigator. I’m a transactional attorney, doing deals and IP work.

[5:06]
Albert Lu: I studied electrical engineering about four years after you, also earning a master’s degree. In 1994, I remember trade magazines full of ads from firms looking for electrical engineers to go to law school. There was a huge demand in the U.S. for scientifically minded lawyers. Another observation: when you’re 17, you don’t really know what you want to do. You have an idea of what you’re good at, but the career chooses you as much as you choose it, based on market incentives like prestige and earning potential. Do you think that’s a good thing? You probably don’t regret engineering, but what do you think about the market choosing your path?

[6:25]
Stephan Kinsella: Times have changed. I have an 11-year-old son, and advising him on college and career choices will be more systematic and maybe agonizing than it was for me. In our system, then and now, if you’re intelligent, competent, hardworking, and have the right values, you’re suited for many things. It’s an embarrassment of riches—you need to narrow your choices. The choices you make, like your major or first job, narrow your future options, and there’s nothing wrong with that. The market guides the allocation of human capital through signals. I grew up in lower-middle-class rural Louisiana, but I was smart, did well in school, and had supportive parents who gave me educational opportunities. For my generation, the most crucial thing was an optimistic background where success was assumed. I never questioned that I’d make it. I got reinforcement through good grades, job offers, and a supportive family. Part of that was luck and circumstance, but the lesson is that young kids need an open-ended field to explore and confidence to pursue their goals within realistic bounds. You can’t be a Romanian translator if you don’t know the language or a basketball player if you’re too short. But with optimism, a plan, and hard work, you can succeed. The most successful people I know are adaptive, seizing opportunities they’re good at.

Domain Names and Trademarks

[10:03]
Albert Lu: Put on your Monday-through-Friday attorney hat, not your academic thinker one. I’m an online entrepreneur marketing a product and want to pick a domain name. Should I worry about using domain names with trademarked words? Is that a potential problem?

[10:32]
Stephan Kinsella: Yes, you should worry. Trademark law, which has wormed its way into international and internet law, can cause issues. If you have a domain name like TomCruise.com or Madonna.com, even though Madonna doesn’t own the word “Madonna,” her fame and resources mean she could challenge it through the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) using a Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP) proceeding. She could potentially take the domain from you, even if no one is defrauded or your use is legitimate. These laws allow bullying. Even Ron Paul’s campaign tried to stop someone using RonPaul.com in a UDRP proceeding, which was disheartening. As a businessman, you need to be careful when selecting a domain name, just like choosing a business name. Consult a trademark lawyer to ensure there’s no risk, or understand that your domain could be taken. Consider having backup domains.

[12:40]
Albert Lu: Would this search need to be international?

[12:43]
Stephan Kinsella: Ten years ago, I’d have said the USPTO website was enough, but now domains are accessible globally, with international commerce implications. You need a WIPO search and a full international search. It’s challenging—even companies like Apple have lost trademarks in places like Mexico because it’s hard to secure all rights worldwide.

[13:22]
Albert Lu: Slightly related, the Washington Redskins’ trademark was deemed invalid by the USPTO for being offensive. What’s your take?

[13:39]
Stephan Kinsella: I suspect they’ll get their mark back on appeal, but losing a trademark doesn’t harm them much. They can still use the name “Redskins”; they just can’t exclusively control it. Others can sell Redskins t-shirts, making the name more prevalent. The USPTO’s decision eases restrictions, unless the NFL has a rule requiring teams to have trademarked names, which could force a change to maintain monopoly control.

Copyright and Trademark

[15:01]
Albert Lu: Let’s forget trademarks for a moment. Say I have a cool domain name like PowerAndMarket.com, but the term might be copyrighted. Is that a concern?

[15:19]
Stephan Kinsella: Let’s clarify the four main types of intellectual property: patent, trademark, copyright, and trade secret. This has nothing to do with patents or trade secrets, as the domain name isn’t secret. Copyright applies to original expressions of ideas, but short titles like “Titanic” or “Power and Market” aren’t protected because they’re too brief to be considered original. If you wrote a sci-fi novel called “Titanic” unrelated to the ship, it wouldn’t violate copyright. For PowerAndMarket.com, the only concern is trademark. Check the USPTO’s trademark search engine (TESS) for “Power and Market.” If it’s registered for similar services, you could have a problem. If not, you’re likely clear. You might consider filing your own trademark to preempt others from monopolizing it. The problem with the IP system is it forces people to hire lawyers for protections they wouldn’t need in a free market, creating a waste of resources. Patent, trademark, and tax lawyers exist because of these systems, like oncologists exist because of cancer. In an ideal world, we’d have neither.

[18:57]
Albert Lu: You’re comparing cancer to tax and patent law?

[19:05]
Stephan Kinsella: Yes, tax and patent laws are like cancers on the free market economy.

Should You Trademark Power and Market?

[19:26]
Albert Lu: So, if “Power and Market” isn’t trademarked, should I consider trademarking it? And I shouldn’t worry about a call from Lew Rockwell’s attorneys?

[19:44]
Stephan Kinsella: You say you checked and it’s not trademarked. “Power and Market” is the title of a Rothbard book, but that’s a copyright issue, and titles aren’t copyrighted. I doubt it’s trademarked as a source identifier for goods or services. From what I know, the risk to you is low. But yes, consider filing a trademark registration for “Power and Market” for services like delivering information via radio, internet, or podcasts.

Productivity Tools

[20:59]
Albert Lu: Every guest shares a productivity tool or life hack. You run your own law practice, so you must rely on online tools. What can you share with the audience to help a home-based business?

[21:17]
Stephan Kinsella: One tool is j2.com, an online fax service I’ve used daily for 10 years. I hate that faxing still exists, but j2.com lets you send and receive faxes via email. You can email a document to a fax number through their system. There’s a free version and affordable paid versions. Another tool is SugarSync.com, a paid service that synchronizes folders across your computers—Mac, Windows, iPad—to a cloud account. It keeps all your devices in sync, like Dropbox but better. I also use Carbonite for online backups. These are mundane but invaluable for my practice.

[23:19]
Albert Lu: How can someone contact you about a trademark or IP issue?

[23:25]
Stephan Kinsella: Visit stephankinsella.com for my email on the contact page. I’m on Facebook and Skype as NSKinsella—my first name is Norman, but I go by Stephan. I’m NSKinsella everywhere.

Closing

[23:57]
Albert Lu: Thank you so much for joining me. I could go on, but we’ll have to do a part two, maybe in person. This hour-and-a-half flew by.

[24:13] [Music]

[24:19]
Albert Lu: Thanks to Stephan Kinsella for joining me. Find him at stephankinsella.com. For the rest of this interview, visit powerandmarket.com/bonus for free weekly bonus content. That’s the Power and Market Report for Tuesday, July 29. I’m Albert Lu. Thanks for listening.

 

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Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 138. 

This is my appearance on the most recent episode (376) of Ben Stone’s Bad Quaker podcast, Recorded July 16, 2014, posted July 27, 2014. From his description page:

“Stephan Kinsella and Ben Stone have a chat about getting even, property rights, and how many libertarians can dance on the head of a pin.

Links:

We also talked about Tesla and patents.

 

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Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 137.

I participated in an impromptu Google Hangout by Daniel Rothschild for his “Live Free, Die Old” podcast, including Matt Gilliland and James Cox, on the night after I did a Liberty.me seminar. Rambling and casual. We give poor Cox a bit too much grief for being confused and apparently relativist about rights. Good times.

*** For an extra, see the Youtube at the bottom, a 30 minute talk between me and Cox, when I was in Banff Canada and lost in the woods and shooting the sh*t with him.

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Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 136.

A discussion with Carlos Morales on the Truth Over Comfort podcast. We discuss children’s rights, spanking, my article “How We Come To Own Ourselves,” “intractable” issues like abortion, etc.

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KOL135 | Life, Liberty and Proper Tea

Kinsella on Liberty Podcast, Episode 135.

My discussion with Bernie Greene of the Life, Liberty and Proper Tea podcast, released July 18, 2014. From his shownotes:

“Stephan Kinsella has made some profound contributions to the liberty philosophy. Here we touch on the nature of law in a free society, IP, democracy vs other forms of tyranny and, of course, pipe smoking.

https://stephankinsella.com/

And this is Stephan’s podcast feed. It includes some incredibly interesting stuff including an entire lecture series on Libertarian Legal Theory. I’ve listened to many of the podcasts several times. Truly excellent stuff.

https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/kinsella-on-liberty/id595093254

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