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Ron Paul Asks UN For Help Geting Control of RonPaul.com Domain From Fans

First time accepted submitter thoughtfulbloke writes "Ron Paul has gone to the United Nations' World Intellectual Property Organization to seize control of the RonPaul.com domain from the fans that built it up, rather than purchase it. From the article: 'The proprietors of RonPaul.com say they reached out to the retired politicain and offered him RonPaul.org as a free gift, but if he "insisted" on owning RonPaul.com then they would sell it to him. There was a catch, though. It would be part of a "liberty package" with the site's 170,000 person mailing list for... wait for it... $250,000. They think the price is totally worth it: '"

611 comments

  1. Welcome to Capitalism by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There was a catch, though. It would be part of a "liberty package" with the site's 170,000 person mailing list for... wait for it... $250,000. They think the price is totally worth it

    That's the funny thing about Capitalism ... wait for it ... the market decides what the price should be. And right now, they have a very unique piece of property that will cost whatever they want to sell it for because they ... wait for it ... own it! But, you know, let's clamor and argue for the defunding and dissolution of the UN right up until it benefits us personally. This is a very surprising and disappointing action from Paul -- a politician who once rarely (if ever) contradicted himself.

    From the horse's mouth:

    We must stop special interests from violating property rights and literally driving families from their homes, farms and ranches. Today, we face a new threat of widespread eminent domain actions as a result of powerful interests who want to build a NAFTA superhighway through the United States from Mexico to Canada.

    We also face another danger in regulatory takings: Through excess regulation, governments deprive property owners of significant value and use of their properties – all without paying ”just compensation.”

    Property rights are the foundation of all rights in a free society. Without the right to own a printing press, for example, freedom of the press becomes meaningless. Congress must work to get federal agencies out of these schemes to deny property owners their constitutional rights to life, liberty, and property.

    Property rights are the foundation of all rights in a free society unless the property we're talking about are domain names that you feel are yours, right Senator Paul?

    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by theedgeofoblivious · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Free market, my ass.

      You hypocrite.

    2. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Redmancometh · · Score: 0

      This. So much this.

    3. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by vlm · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Property rights are the foundation of all rights in a free society unless the property we're talking about are domain names that you feel are yours

      I think this is unintentionally very funny because the domain name is his name, which is presumably his property. Now if he was trying to steal "campaignforliberty.com" that would be an interesting argument assuming they weren't just domain squatters who registered well after the PR campaign started.

      If there is a lesson, don't start up a 3rd party site with a name consisting of nothing but the 1st party name. Even "unofficialsupportforronpaul.com" would have been more morally justifiable than just taking the dude's name and slapping a dotcom on the end.

      --
      "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
    4. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 0, Troll

      I'm not a Ron Paul supporter, and I think the hypocrisy comment regarding the UN is noted and as enjoyable as political irony can be. But, taking the high(er) road: this is a website that uses his name, is entirely about his career, and affects him materially. I think there can be only 2 fair outcomes: a C&D asking them to close shop and dissolve, or to hand the domain over to him.

      Domain name squatters are at least a magnitude of filth higher than politicians, and the whole "internet real estate" business was a scam 20 years ago and is still a scam today.

    5. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by sumdumass · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just because the function of ridding domains of squatters is at the UN does not mean the rest of the UN's operations or conduct is legit.

      Look at the LA cop thing in California in which the have shot up 3 separate scenes and wounded several completely innocent people trying to execute a criminal instead of arresting him and going to court for justice. I can talk about how much of a thug the cops are, how they are completely incompetent scared little bitches ignoring the constitutional right of due process hell bent on inflicting personal revenge on the ex cop who killed one of their own and claims to have information proving they were in the wrong for his termination and acted abhorrently in several criminal cases, but I would still call them to report my home was burglarized. That wouldn't be some giant conflict of interest or reversal of anything else I stood for..

    6. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't worry, Ron Paul is just demonstrate that he's a true Republican. Sure, he takes principled stands..until money is involved and he can get/save money. Of course, such was clear when your idea to make a smaller government is to join that government and do nothing effective for decades to actually shrink government. Maybe joining was some sort of a protest? Well, RMS protests against proprietary software and as much as people give him slack, they still see how it tries very hard to live by his code. But the simple truth is, a true sign of character is holding to your principles precisely when it's hardest to do so. But, that doesn't give one carte blanche to ignore them on one of the most unimportant things one can imagine, his vanity plate for the internet.

      So, I salute you, Ron Paul, for showing just how much you care about your facade.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    7. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      the only thing worse than a congressman is a hypocrite.

    8. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Soluzar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      At least one famous person shares my name. Which one of us owns the dot com rights?

    9. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Sarten-X · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And that just about sums up my feelings, as well.

      Ron Paul's a populist politician. He's managed to paint the government as a corrupt agency of fat-cat Democrats, by ignoring the measurable good of government programs and focusing only on how much they cost. He's made the Federal Reserve a scapegoat for everything wrong with the economy, and thanks to the magic of psychology-driven Austrian economics, he can just forget about the economic problems before the Fed existed, because they were just so long ago.

      This is yet another chapter in the tale of Ron Paul's subtle hypocrisy. He'll complain about globalization and fight against having any global authorities interfering in private citizens' lives, yet he has no problem running to a global authority to interfere in other people's lives on his behalf.

      I'm thrilled the guy's retired (for now). Here's hoping it's permanent, and that his equally-populist son follows quickly.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    10. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Jason+Levine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How is the domain automatically his if it is his name? What if the domain was registered by someone else bearing the name "Ron Paul"? Would Politician Ron Paul be able to wrest control of the domain from the not-as-well-known Ron Paul based solely on name recognition? And what if not-as-well-known Ron Paul wanted to sell the domain name? Should he be limited in selling it to someone whose name is "Ron Paul" or can he sell it to anything (for example, a fan of politician Ron Paul).

      (Not saying that's what happened here. Just pointing out that having a name isn't the same thing as automatically having rights to a domain name with said name.)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    11. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Interesting

      So you believe his name is unique?
      No one else has that name on Earth?

      What if I want to make a website about how he is a hypocrite? Why can I not buy ronpaul.com and make that my site about his hypocrisy?

      How about instead of more regulation we simply let the free market solve this?

    12. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But... isn't he a politician who actually supports this kind of wild capitalism?

    13. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Or give it to me and let me make a website that points out his hypocrisy.

      I will make it clear it is not endorsed by him.

    14. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Capitalism and 'the market' are disjoint.

    15. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 2

      Property rights are the foundation of all rights in a free society unless the property we're talking about are domain names that you feel are yours, right Senator Paul?

      I personally feel that he'd be much better off just ignoring the domain and creating his own website (possibly with the domain, http://domains-do-not-really-matter-anymore.com/ but I do understand where he is coming from a little bit. People will assume that whatever is being published at www.ronpaul.com will be things that Ron Paul agrees with. Think of it as a giant newletter with Ron Paul's logo on it. Of course, he could just ignore it and let them publish whatever they feel like, but if he does that and they publish something he really disagrees with it could cause some damage to his "brand." Perhaps he figures the only way to prevent a repeat of the 1980's racist newletters incident is to make sure he controls his own brand.....

      Of course, once again my own opinion is that he'd be much better just getting a different domain with great content and making sure his domain *clearly* states that he has no editorial control over http://www.ronpaul.com./

    16. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      ... But then, I repeat myself.
      (With apologies to Mr. Clemens)

    17. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by rudy_wayne · · Score: 5, Informative

      This is a very surprising and disappointing action from Paul -- a politician who once rarely (if ever) contradicted himself.

      Well you haven't been paying attention.

        As a member of congress he has repeatedly added amendments to spending bills giving millions to his home district. Then when the bill comes up for a vote, knowing that the bill is going to pass, he votes against the bill. That way he gets millions in pork for his constituents and at the same time can claim he voted against a wasteful spending bill.

    18. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aaahahaha! Are you fucking serious? My name is "All The Gold In Fort Knox". Now hand over what is rightfully mine. Oh oh no wait, my name is also "Ron Paul", and I want my 1/1000th share of my website too.

      A person's name does not give them property rights.

    19. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by balsy2001 · · Score: 1

      Is there a difference?

      --
      GENERATION 27: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    20. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is an honest question: what other methods could Ron Paul have legally used to deal with this? It is my understanding that the UN's World Intellectual Property Organization is the only "legal" body capable of addressing this issue.

      I don't think it is hypocrisy to work within the system - some so-called "libertarians" choose to pay their taxes, and others go on anti-tax protests that land them in jail for the entirety of their adult lives. At the same time, both of these people could have the exact same political opinions. Libertarianism - like all other political philosophies - doesn't tell you how to act - it merely informs how you think.

    21. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by DarkOx · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I have been a Paul support and I disagree. I would say unless what they are putting on the site is untrue, in which case its libel and is why we have civil courts, there is no reason they should have to turn over the name or be expected to do so without compensation. Compensation should be the price they set as its currently their property.

      You can't call them squatters either they are actually using the domain, have real current content there, and its even related to the subject the name would lead you to expect. What they are doing is more or less the antithesis of domain squatting.

      Really I am disappointed in Paul over this one in a big way. I don't see anything wrong with what the people on the site are doing. Actually Paul should be grateful because they are basically promoting him.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    22. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He owns it because those syllables were given to him by his parents, and they aren't used for anyone else?

      I could pose that property is something you take, you say "this is mine" and no one argues. But now someone is arguing so the question is what is your working definition of property?

    23. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, taking the high(er) road: this is a website that uses his name, is entirely about his career, and affects him materially. I think there can be only 2 fair outcomes: a C&D asking them to close shop and dissolve, or to hand the domain over to him.

      It is factual information about a person. Does that mean people should have the right to send C&D letters to creditors, credit reporting companies, and criminal records offices? After all, those things use names, is entirely about your behavior, and affects you materially.

    24. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      That's a good question. What if I name a child Google and then try to get their domain name? They don't have someone named it. Also its probably worth a lot more.

    25. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by bsDaemon · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul was a member of the House. Rand Paul, his son, is the Senator from Kentucky.

    26. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      He's managed to paint the government as a corrupt agency of fat-cat Democrats, by ignoring the measurable good of government programs and focusing only on how much they cost.

      Is that worse than ignoring the cost and focusing only on the measurable good of government programs?

      Maybe we need to operate on his premise for a few decades instead of continuing to operate on yours.

      (hint: In the United States, the governments spends more per household than the median income of households)

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    27. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by flaming+error · · Score: 1

      Good question, and I don't know what the best answer is. But a software developer named Mike Rowe was not allowed to have the domain mikerowesoft.com because microsoft thought it was too close to their name. It seems like Ron Paul has a much stronger case for ronpaul.com.

      As to letting the free market solve it, good point. But he's not asking for more regulation, he's asking for enforcement of current regulations in the current system.

    28. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by ceoyoyo · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They're not squatters. They run an active web site which is about a public, political figure.

    29. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This isn't domain squatting. They've been actively using the site for multiple elections expressly to promote Ron Paul. These are *his* ardent supporters who did this on their own dime and if he wants to control the benefits of that...guess what, pay up. They aren't asking for millions, just a paltry 250K. Spread over 4 years over multiple people. It's hardly trying to 'cash in' on something.

      Ron Paul is both hypocritical here and right on the money. Which is that his libertarian views are that he's allowed to do whatever he wants...including suing people or running to governmental agencies for help.

      Libertarianism itself is hypocritical...and it's downright fun to watch the ardent supporters get a lesson in that...

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    30. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Free market? What part of a government monopoly on providing domain names seems free market to you?

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    31. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There's a difference between using a website for your personal space representing yourself and using it to claim to speak for another person who it is named after. A distinction that is conspicuous by its absence from any reporting on this issue I have seen (although here and gawker are hardly a representative sample). Can it be that in their fervour to beat Ron Paul with the stick of his own alleged hypocrisy his detractors indulge in quite a degree of intellectual dishonesty?

    32. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      the domain name is his name, which is presumably his property

      What kind of stupid logic is that?

      Does everyone named Antonio own all the Antonio's pizzerias?

      My name is the same as a semi-famous musician. Do I get all his royalties since I'm about 6 months older than him?

      Where will that kind of 'logic' end!?!?

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    33. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by h4rr4r · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What you mean is he wants to use force to make someone give him their property.

      I disagree with the MikeRoweSoft.com thing even more. It was clearly nothing like microsoft.com. Anyone who would be confused by that would be too stupid to type.

    34. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 2

      It's kind of a might makes right vs possession is 9/10ths of the law argument.

      Also, these aren't domain squatters. They're actively using it ... to promote Ron Paul.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    35. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Is that worse than ignoring the cost and focusing only on the measurable good of government programs?

      Sounds like every politician, on both sides of the aisle.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    36. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by rudy_wayne · · Score: 4, Informative

      How is the domain automatically his if it is his name? What if the domain was registered by someone else bearing the name "Ron Paul"? Would Politician Ron Paul be able to wrest control of the domain from the not-as-well-known Ron Paul based solely on name recognition? And what if not-as-well-known Ron Paul wanted to sell the domain name? Should he be limited in selling it to someone whose name is "Ron Paul" or can he sell it to anything (for example, a fan of politician Ron Paul).

      (Not saying that's what happened here. Just pointing out that having a name isn't the same thing as automatically having rights to a domain name with said name.)

      You would be absolutely 100% correct, IF the domain ronpaul.com was being used for some other purpose. Maybe there's a plumber named Ron Paul who wants to put up a website. Or an accountant. Or a guy named Ron Paul wants to sell auto parts on the Internet. Those are all legitimate.

      But that's not the case here. The domain is being used exclusively for activities relating to Ron Paul the congressman from Texas. This is exactly the definition of cybersquatting.

    37. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 2

      He doesn't have a legal right to deal with it.

      That's the hypocrisy of it all.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    38. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 2

      Sources? I totally believe you but I'd love to see the actual proof :)

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    39. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by ByOhTek · · Score: 2

      I'm not sure how you find this surprising.

      A lot of 'pro-capitalism' individuals may squeal about how the government and it's influence are bad, and how great free market is, but they also are the very first to turn a blind eye if they can make a profit from it. Their goal isn't an effective economy, a well run and organized civilization, providing goods for the market, etc. Their goals are to have the larges proportion of wealth possible, regardless who/what else it may hurt.

      In this case, why get something for $250,000 when he can use a group he villified to get it for much less? Assuming he doesn't want to go much further into politics, he won't have to worry too much about burning the bridges of the supporters who made the site...

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    40. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Such a surprise that a politician's actions would not match up with their (claimed) views.

    41. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Stone+Rhino · · Score: 4, Interesting

      No, there's actually a documented history of names being used for other purposes. This kind of thing has been going on for over a decade. FordReallySucks.com is all about the quest of big companies to squelch critical sites that use their name.

      http://www.fordreallysucks.com/more_info.html

      --


      Remember, there were no nuclear weapons before women were allowed to vote.
    42. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by CanHasDIY · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is exactly the definition of cybersquatting.

      As a matter of fact, No, it's not.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    43. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But Microsoft isn't pretending to be a libertarian. This isn't about whether legislation or the power of the UN can get him the domain name without paying for it. It's whether Ron Paul is a hypocrite or not.

      And yes, he is being a hypocrite. He want's a governmental body to take someone else's property off them rather than buy it in a free market.

    44. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by CanHasDIY · · Score: 0

      Not to mention the fact that if you put http://mikerowesoft.com/ into a browser, it takes you to... Microsoft's website.

      Reverse cybersquatting?

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    45. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      There are over 8 billion 7-letter .com domain names in existence, the vast majority of which are still available and not already the private property of someone else. He's free to choose any of those, at very reasonable market prices.

    46. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      That's the funny thing about Capitalism ... wait for it ... the market decides what the price should be.

      No it doesn't -- at least not in any fair and objective way.

      Prices more often than not get determined by what the vendor is willing to sell it for, and with groups of vendors getting together to decide on a common price.

      'The Market' isn't some vehicle which achieves perfect outcomes based on fair measures. It gets tinkered with and manipulated to make some of the players rich.

      But, you know, let's clamor and argue for the defunding and dissolution of the UN right up until it benefits us personally.

      Coming from him, this is irony beyond irony as he's one of the loudest opponents of them.

      Unfortunately, both the UN and NAFTA tend to be things that people are in favor of for one purpose, and actively against for another purpose. Corn and steel subsidies for example. When other countries have them, it's unfair competition; when America has them they're vital to national interests. So the message is "whatever works best for us".

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    47. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yes, it's the most delicious piece of libertarian hypocrisy since Ayn Rand took Social Security payments and Medicare benefits under the name of Ann O'Connor.

    48. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      No, they got that domain name in the decision GP was referring too. They have been directing to their website ever since.

    49. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by CanHasDIY · · Score: 0

      But, taking the high(er) road: this is a website that uses his name, is entirely about his career, and affects him materially. I think there can be only 2 fair outcomes: a C&D asking them to close shop and dissolve, or to hand the domain over to him.

      So, if someone wrote a book (or movie, or any other form of media that disseminates information) that used a politician's name, was entirely about his career, and affected him materially, you think it would be appropriate to shut down the publisher, or force them to hand over the publishing rights?

      Are you aware of how insane that concept sounds?

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    50. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      It's still not a "free market". It's a monopoly with a lot of choices. You buy from the government or no one at all.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    51. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While, yes, the counter argument, is a good one, as it's just his name and there was no other Ron Paul that they were representing.

      But even considering that, I don't know that we can side with Mr. Paul (whom I would love to share a beer with and discuss this issue). Domain name camping has been going on for some time with a few legal precedents and lots of gambling. In fact, with 170k mailing list participants one could argue the owners of this domain have considerable sweat equity in it. Under our existing capitalist system they deserve to be compensated for their effort.

      If they decided to oppose RonPaul in the coming election and inform their 170k following of his mistakes, would he then get the right to shut them down for not playing nice? When does the First Amendment kick in and the UN's rights become secondary? To the merit if his detractors "Old Ron Paul" would have said the First Amendment trumps any UN opinions. He should go back to being Old Ron Paul and write them a check and be done with it.

    52. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one is operating on that premise, anyone with a serious political position knows all too well how painfully expensive government programs are.

    53. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not that I'm arguing with the principle of what they're saying, but when your argument says:
      "And most people who remain in their right mind would have no problem doing a "whois" on the Domain Name..."
      don't really understand who 'most people' really are. Or why Ford (or anyone) might at least have a problem with what they did.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    54. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Jiro · · Score: 1

      He's not disputing it with another person named Ron Paul, he's disputing it with someone who is using the site to refer to him, but is not him. In other words, "what if the other person has a legitimate claim?" is a nice question, but it only applies if the other person really does have a legitimate claim. The name's not owned by someone else named Ron Paul, it's owned by a cybersquatter.

      PS: the article talks about his "fans". Reading between the lines, someone charging $250000 is almost certainly going to keep the money for himself, not divide it among the 170000 members of the mailing list and give them $1.47 each, which he would do if he was really acting on behalf of the fans.

    55. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Ryanrule · · Score: 1

      "right from the horse's ass"

      fixt

    56. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      I don't get it, are you saying his name is not his?

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    57. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Vaphell · · Score: 0

      and the problem is where exactly? it's called 'having a plan B'

      His constituents paid taxes that were being spent and he made sure some of it goes back, in case the voting goes the other way. And earmarked spending is better than the standard "we'll blow money on whatever and nobody will know where" because taxpayer can track it.
      don't spend > spend but earmark > spend

      Everybody laughed at his hardcore idealism yet he's criticized for pragmatism as well.

    58. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by nedlohs · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How is it hypocritical for someone who proclaims that people should act in their own rational self interest to do something that is in their own self interest?

    59. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by CanHasDIY · · Score: 0

      In other words, Microsoft did to MikeRoweSoft exactly what they claimed MikeRoweSoft was going to do to them.

      Fuckin' Classy.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    60. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by JackieBrown · · Score: 3, Informative

      He's managed to paint the government as a corrupt agency of fat-cat Democrats

      I wish this where true. He spent the bulk of the time during the debates and afterwards complaining the problem was Republicans. I agree with you about being glad he is retiring. I wish they would all "retire" after 2 or 3 terms.

    61. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      And this is different from anything else, how?

      If something (including real estate, natural resources, physical objects, etc) isn't already owned by a private party, it's generally owned or controlled by the government, and that's who you'd buy it from.

      You should be happy that the government makes fresh domain names available for only a couple of bucks. It's like the old days when they used to dole out homesteads and railroad right-of-way almost free of charge.

    62. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Really?

      Just because his name is Ron Paul does not mean he gets to force ronpaul.com to be handed over to him. REGARDLESS OF WHAT THE WEBSITE IS ABOUT.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    63. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 4, Informative

      Really? Do you even know what the term cybersquatter means? Cause you might want to go look it up.

      Just because his name is Ron Paul does not mean he gets to force ronpaul.com to be handed over to him. REGARDLESS OF WHAT THE WEBSITE IS ABOUT.

      It doesn't matter if it's a pro-Ron Paul website, a farcical Ron Paul website, or pointing out all of his errors.

      He didn't register it. He didn't create it. He didn't update it. He didn't do anything for it.

      It's not his.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    64. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by iamhassi · · Score: 1

      At least one famous person shares my name. Which one of us owns the dot com rights?

      Probably the more famous person. I'm sure there's more than one Madonna in the world but Madonna.com should probably belong to the singer.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    65. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with almost every ideologue is that they are prepared to rigidly impose their ideology no matter what the consequences, as long as the consequences aren't to them. Apparently government should rigidly protect people's property unless they are trying to relieve them of that property.

    66. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by iamhassi · · Score: 0

      How is the domain automatically his if it is his name? What if the domain was registered by someone else bearing the name "Ron Paul"? Would Politician Ron Paul be able to wrest control of the domain from the not-as-well-known Ron Paul based solely on name recognition? And what if not-as-well-known Ron Paul wanted to sell the domain name? Should he be limited in selling it to someone whose name is "Ron Paul" or can he sell it to anything (for example, a fan of politician Ron Paul).

      (Not saying that's what happened here. Just pointing out that having a name isn't the same thing as automatically having rights to a domain name with said name.)

      You would be absolutely 100% correct, IF the domain ronpaul.com was being used for some other purpose. Maybe there's a plumber named Ron Paul who wants to put up a website. Or an accountant. Or a guy named Ron Paul wants to sell auto parts on the Internet. Those are all legitimate.

      But that's not the case here. The domain is being used exclusively for activities relating to Ron Paul the congressman from Texas. This is exactly the definition of cybersquatting.

      This x100. It's cybersquatting to buy the name of a famous person or brand and wait for them to offer six-figures to buy it. RonPaulFans.com would be ok for fans to own, but RonPaul.com should belong to Ron Paul.

      --
      my karma will be here long after I'm gone
    67. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Dishevel · · Score: 0

      It is not.
      If you have a deep seated hatred of the person in question, and are rooted in fear of their ideas.
      You can easily overlook the logical problems in your argument so that you can feel better about yourself.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    68. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Fwipp · · Score: 1

      It would be a hypocritical reversal if you had previously been calling for LA to opt out of having a police department entirely.

    69. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by nuonguy · · Score: 1

      Libertarianism itself is hypocritical...

      Shouldn't it be called "Republicanism" then? :-)

      Seriously though, are you saying it is internally inconsistent as a philosophy? If so, I would find it hard to distinguish from Anarchism.

    70. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Dishevel · · Score: 1

      Those letters strung together in that order are not your property.
      Period.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    71. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

      Generally I and Ron Paul would agree with you. This however is a unique piece of property. The owners of the domain are basically representing Ron Paul without his authorization. If it were "RonPaulforCongress.com" it would be different. If the sites content were not Ron Paul related. But they are running a site dedicated to the life of an individual and promoting political ideology he may or may not approve of.

      On top of that, they are basically trying to extort money out of the man. Their motives are clearly to squat on the domain until they get a fat wad of cash. I think that we agreed long ago that Cybersquating was bad for the internet. If you're not using a domain for anything other than investment, you shouldn't have it. You need to develop the domains value on your own, not wait until someone else does it for you by mistake and then extort them for cash.

    72. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Charliemopps · · Score: 2

      Exactly, his claim is legit, not because the domain is his name. It's legit because they are implicitly implying that they represent him. He has the right to have control over his own voice on the internet.

    73. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if I don't want to ... wait for it... WAIT FOR IT?

    74. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Sarten-X · · Score: 1

      Fair point. Perhaps I should say it's painted as the agency of liberals, as Mr. Paul finds Republicans too liberal...

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    75. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      And this is different from anything else, how?

      Free markets exist even without government intervention. ICANN does not. If ICANN just... went away... there would be a painful period followed by competing solutions to the problem of letting people find the IP address they are looking for. The ICANN solution might be preferable to that, but let's not pretend it is a "free market".

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    76. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by theshibboleth · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul's a congressman. His son Rand is the senator.

    77. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Because that's not what she believed, nor what the American right-wing Objectivists believe. It's a nice way of stating a subset of the actual belief, which is "screw everyone else, I got mine, and programs like Social Security and Medicare shouldn't exist at all".

      If you don't see the hypocrisy, then you are essentially a blind religious fanatic for this brand of extremist Libertarian thought.

    78. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by sribe · · Score: 1

      And right now, they have a very unique piece of property that will cost whatever they want to sell it for because they ... wait for it ... own it!

      Legally, a domain is not property. (Not even the arguably-fictional "intellectual" kind.) Domains are treated by the law more as a service--a special kind of service where some would-be users have somewhat more rights to some specific instances...

    79. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish they would all "retire" after 2 or 3 terms.

      Quite. Our country began its long slide into darkness the moment 'politician' became a valid career choice.

      Well, we had two good years there.

    80. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Sique · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, it should belong to the Catholic Church, which does the most business under the "Madonna" label, by far exceeding the singer's revenue.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    81. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Sarten-X · · Score: 2

      Honestly, I think it is somewhat worse, because anger is stronger (politically) than affection.

      By focusing on cost alone, the whole system including its history is cast as bad because of its immediate past. The people clamor immediately to throw out the old system. After the public outrage, any attempt to accurately discuss benefits is tainted by the accusations of cronyism and corruption.

      By focusing on the system's measurable good, we can determine first whether the system is pushing toward a desirable end (for its expected timeframe... some programs aren't expected to show measurable results for several years). If the program isn't even heading in the right direction, it's a candidate for closure. After the benefit is accurately measured, the cost can be discussed. If the program costs too much, it can be suspended with a note that "the program was successful, but unsustainable".

      In an interesting analogy, it's the equivalent of consumerism in politics. You can buy a new government program, use it until it loses the shine and starts showing some flaws, then throw it all away and buy new. The alternative is to keep old programs around and recycle them to fit current needs.

      Of course, both extremes are somewhat problematic with idealism. The most likely best choice is somewhere in the middle, weighing costs against resources and benefits against need.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    82. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      There is and always will be legal system to go hand in hand with a free market.

      Anyone who thinks a free-market = highest bidder is pretty sad. There are always non-profits, mutual, regulatory systems, legal systems, voluntary organizations....

      The key to a free market is not maximum profit, but freedom of choice.

      In any case, domain name registration is not just a bidding process. There are other concerns such as trade mark and if you have a genuine interest in the name. There have been many legal cases about it in the past.

      http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/property00/domain/main.html

      It is perfectly valid for anyone to use the legal system to give them their due rights. I'm not a lawyer to know if he's in the right here. Suffice to say the domain name is HIS NAME, but the registrants are currently using his name in good faith. But I think it is a valid case to take to the regulatory bodies to sort out.

      Property rights are the foundation of all rights.
      That is not the question.
      The question is if his *name* is his property and how to handle that conflict.

      Suffice to say those who currently own ronpaul.com should not be left without due compensation from either Ron Paul or the regulatory body.

    83. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No one "fears" these hallucinations and masturbatory fantasies you call "ideas". We recognize them as the laughable fictions of the spoiled, the immature, and those with little experience with human interaction. Sometimes when you scream and cry to be taken seriously we find it upsetting and annoying and want to apply some constructive corporal punishment.

    84. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by realityimpaired · · Score: 1

      You have to admit that going to the UN WIPO to try to claim the domain is a very libertarian thing for him to do... /rolleyes

    85. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by gubon13 · · Score: 1

      If they decided to oppose RonPaul in the coming election and inform their 170k following of his mistakes, would he then get the right to shut them down for not playing nice?

      Ron Paul retired from politics in 2012.

    86. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      are you saying it is internally inconsistent as a philosophy

      Yep, exactly what I'm saying.

      People who want small government don't understand that 'government' is how we resolve disputes between independent parties. Unless they're going to magically make the human race stop having 'disputes', government will always be around and be relatively large (assuming the populations that support them are likewise large).

      Desiring a more efficient/streamlined government would be reasonable, but mostly they aren't asking for that from what I've seen, both Libertarians and Republicans/Conservatives.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    87. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Dishevel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The domain is being used exclusively for activities relating to Ron Paul the congressman from Texas. This is exactly the definition of cybersquatting.

      No.
      Cybersquatting is not what you think it is.

      From liked article.
      is registering, trafficking in, or using a domain name with bad faith intent to profit from the goodwill of a trademark belonging to someone else. The cybersquatter then offers to sell the domain to the person or company who owns a trademark contained within the name at an inflated price.

      I do not see bad faith here. They created the site to help Ron Paul get elected. (Fail 1)
      They have a huge mailing list of people interested in hearing from Ron Paul. This list has value the asking price is probably not far from fair. (Fail 2)

      Ron Paul should stop being a bitch and work a deal with these people.
      Ron Paul runs to have something that people created to benefit him, that has inherent value that came from their work to be taken from them by an international organization that he believes is bad and should go away.
      Fuck Ron Paul.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    88. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Dishevel · · Score: 1

      I failed to copy my link correctly.
      Real Link

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    89. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      This article makes the point why this is hypocritical:
      http://www.huffingtonpost.com/michael-ford/ayn-rand-and-the-vip-dipe_b_792184.html

      Ayn took the money after criticizing the programs and making the implication that people who took the money were weak. Self interest wasn't her only tenet.

      Also, the other implication is that she took the money under a different name to avoid looking hypocritical. That may also be self interest but it also points to a failure to live up to her openly espoused philosophies. It would be interesting to find out how much money she had amassed during her lifetime and whether she had the option to *not* take the money and still be well off. I think that would be particularly hypocritical but I'm unsure of how she did financially.

    90. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Gilmoure · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do as I say, not as I do.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    91. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul owns his likeness. Just because you've been playing in his playground and making improvements for the past 5 years doesn't mean you own it. It was his from the start.

      Now he's asked you to decamp. Perhaps that's rude and abrupt, but guess what? It never was yours. All that effort of yours? You donated it. If that donation proves to have been to someone unworthy, well, that's the way cookie crumbles.

      If you want to own it, play in your own playground instead of someone else's.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    92. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Gription · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Back in the 90s the company owning the rights to the Archie comics went after "Veronica.org". A guy setup the site because he had a toddler named Veronica and he posted a couple pictures. It finally fell out in the guy's favor...
      http://news.cnet.com/2100-1023-220240.html


      If being named the same as a site gave you rights, could you imagine the dust-up for johnsmith.com?

    93. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone on the right side of the political spectrum is a huge hypocrite, you should know that by now.

    94. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      (Not saying that's what happened here.)

      It's what actually happened. The first owner's name was Ron Paul...the current owners bought it from him...Let me tell you the whole story about RonPaul.com...The current owners bought it on Ebay back in 2008 from Ron Paul...they didn't cybersquat and initially register the domain themselves...I remember going to the Ebay auction back in 2008 and seeing RonPaul.com go for over 25K...a friend of mine told me this
      -------
      "If Ron Paul could hire competent people, he would already own the damned thing. They are supporters who bought it at an auction, while his staff, as usual, ignored all the pleas from the grassroots to buy the damned thing for Ron.
      No sympathy for him at all in this. The people that bought it kept the domain from falling into neocon hands, they spent their time and their money using the site to do nothing but support Ron and his message, and this is the thanks they get. No wonder libertarianism turns off so many people.
      If Ron had any sense, he'd hire them to run the site. That's the win/win solution. But selling it to him would mean it will be run badly. If you doubt that for one second, check out his recent Facebook and Twitter posts. I suspect this is just another effort by those close to him to cash in on his name, now that the campaign well has run dry.
      The story is this: another guy named Ron Paul owned it. He wasn't a fan and wouldn't sell it until the 2008 campaign was winding down. Then, he put it on eBay because they couldn't get on touch with Ron through the campaign.
      I was one of the people calling and emailing the campaign. I had Benton's cell phone number - I personally left him messages. I called the office several times, I emailed the eBay listing to every Ron Paul contact I could find. The people that bought it did him a favor.

    95. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course he hasn't been paying attention! If he had, he'd know just how hypoctical Ron Paul is, rather spouting a Libertarian diatribe.

    96. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Not really. Even if LA had no police department, there would still be elements of law enforcement I would be able to report the issue too. This wouldn't change if the UN disappeared. There would be a mechanism to report and resolve these issues, just at a different location or process.

      Domain squatters and getting rightful access is not something unique that would disappear with the UN. It just happens to be where the process is at the moment.

    97. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because she spent her entire life saying people who accepted help from the government (or anyone) were parasites.

      In the end, Ayn Rand because the kind of parasite she spent her life waging jihad against. Yet she never apologized or admitted she was wrong. She simply sponged up those Big Gubment welfare checks.

    98. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Soluzar the Destroyer gets dibs on your dot com.

    99. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      What is the website name worth without the data it has generated? Obviously RonPaul could have bought up all the domains he needed years ago... He had highly paid campaign managers and millions of dollars to do that. He missed the boat on a $19 donain name don't cry.

      At this point, give the guy the name... But make it clear to the users the site is dead and not to sign up for the site again, delete your bookmarks and clear Google pageranks too. The point of demanding it this late in the game is to cash in on book deals and such... He's probably not running for President again.

    100. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Holi · · Score: 1

      Too bad you can't trademark your name. Without a trademark he has very little standing in WIPO.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    101. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by bmxeroh · · Score: 2

      Michael Bolton? Did i get it right? I can't believe you misplaced the decimal point.

      --
      Central Ohio Home Theater Installation - The Theater People
    102. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realize that it is the congress's job to allocate spending? And not doing that empowers the executive branch to do what they please with unallocated funds. There is nothing hypocritical, i.e. unconstitutional, about his stance on this subject.

    103. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "a politician who once rarely (if ever) contradicted himself. "

      You must have drank the RP Kool-Aid. Here, let me explain. On Paul's website for the 2012 campaign http://web.archive.org/web/20120718023011/http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/abortion/ he stated clearly that he wanted to overturn Roe v. Wade and "give the power back to the states to decide on the issue" but THEN said he wanted to pass a "Sanctity of Life" act that would define when life begins. At. The. **Federal**. Level. This by far isn't the only issue Paul has with the reality of his statements.

    104. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There's nothing wrong with taking advantage of anything you paid into. Whether or not you paid into it willingly is certainly up for debate, but if someone steals your money to pay for something, you certainly do have every right to take what you can from what your money was stolen for.

      This move by Ron Paul, though, is ridiculously wrong and he is giving a bad name to his movement. Then again, he started doing that from day one, sadly. He makes a good gateway drug, I suppose.

    105. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Holi · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Bad argument in the Mikerowsoft case as they settled and it did not go to court. In the end Mike Rowe won, it was Microsoft that walked away with the black eye. They origianlly offered him $10, in the end he got Microsoft to pay all of the expenses that Rowe had incurred including setting up a new site at and redirecting traffic to MikeRoweforums.com. Additionally Microsoft provided Rowe with a subscription to the Microsoft Developer Network, an all expenses paid trip for him and his family to the Microsoft Research Tech Fest at their headquarters in Redmond, Washington, training for Microsoft certification and an Xbox with a selection of games.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    106. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      (hint: In the United States, the governments spends more per household than the median income of households)

      A huge chunk of that is the cost of, or paying interest on the debt accumulated by, the military, war and killing people in other countries our government doesn't like.

    107. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Holi · · Score: 1

      There was no decision, it was a settlement. Quit acting like Microsoft came out the winner on this one. All they got was a shitty domain and a huge PR black eye. Mike Rowe, on the otherhand got a bunch of things from MS and after donating the majority of his legal defense fund he had enough left over to pay for University.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
    108. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The one with more lawyers.

    109. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Half true. Free markets can exist without government intervention, but only providing that ownership of property is practical. For physical goods that means you need at least enough government to run a police force, otherwise the price of any good is reduced to the price of the ammunition required to take it from the current owners. For domain names, the authority over the root servers and a general consensus to use them imparts ownership - ICANN alone 'owns' domains, and everyone else merely rents them.

    110. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tnk1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You know, if the government made me pay for a benefit, then I'm damn well going to use it. That doesn't mean that I think it should exist, but while it does and they are taking my money, I don't see what the issue is. Particularly since that benefit makes me pay them in lieu of what I might put aside for my own retirement.

    111. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by oxdas · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The website clearly states that it is a "fansite" and not affiliated with Ron Paul. While they could do more to distance their site from Ron Paul, that is not what this dispute is about.

      On top of that, they are basically trying to extort money out of the man. Their motives are clearly to squat on the domain until they get a fat wad of cash.

      They have raised millions of dollars for Ron Paul and built him a supporter list of 170,000 people. He did not refuse the money when running his multiple campaigns despite knowing its origins. Did Ron Paul ask the website to cease its operations at any time in the last 5 years? Has Ron Paul offered to pay the costs to build and run the website and mailing list during that time? It sounds to me like Ron Paul knowingly benefitted from the site for a substantial period of time. I would characterize that as, at the very least, implicit consent.

      I think it is quite a stretch to call this situation cybersquatting.

    112. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear Mr. Spielberg,
      I hope this letter finds you well. In the course of natural events it has come to my attention that your movie is an inalienable right upon which I shall remain undivided ...

    113. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      You would... if you got the name first, and proved that you were using it and not parking it.

      Now, it may end up that you don't have the money to fight the battle to prove that, in which case, you may lose.

    114. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they decided to oppose RonPaul in the coming election and inform their 170k following of his mistakes, would he then get the right to shut them down for not playing nice? When does the First Amendment kick in and the UN's rights become secondary? To the merit if his detractors "Old Ron Paul" would have said the First Amendment trumps any UN opinions. He should go back to being Old Ron Paul and write them a check and be done with it.

      In fact, yes he could have them shut down and the domain name forcibly taken from them. Activision obtained the ModernWarfare3.com domain for those very same reasons. The First Amendment is not, never has been, and would be a travesty if it ever were able to be used as a "Do whatever you want" clause. It very specifically only applies to things that are said, not things that are owned, and it doesn't make wishful thinking into a reality or automatically correct people who misunderstand their free speech limitations.

      Ron Paul's main problem here is that he doesn't understand the Internet itself. If he has a domain name dispute, the UN is not the place to go to have it resolved. He should be talking to ICANN.

    115. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by gravis777 · · Score: 1

      This was my thoughts. Usually, someone who picks up a domain name like this does it with the intention that the person / group / company in charge is eventually going to want it, and are planning to make a buck off of it. CyberSquatting has been an issue on the internet for as long as I can remember.

      In a case like this, the group, as a fan page, should be thrilled that he wants the domain, and just ask for the cost of the domain registration and the cost (if there is any with their registar) for transfering. Asking for $250k sounds like extortion to me.

    116. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by ultranova · · Score: 1

      The domain is being used exclusively for activities relating to Ron Paul the congressman from Texas. This is exactly the definition of cybersquatting.

      Even if it is... so what? If I buy gold because I think someone is willing to offer more from it in the future, should that someone have the right to have it confiscated from me because I'm "goldsquatting"? Why should domain names be exempt from the free market - because the rich and the powerful don't have an inherent advantage there?

      Or maybe Ron Paul thinks he should get the domain because he's more deserving than the current owners. Dirty commie.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    117. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "It's legit because they are implicitly implying that they represent him."

      Hi, welcome to gov't 101. This is a We, the people government. We do represent him, because he's trying to represent us.

      He's fucked as a public figure. Our laws fucked him over and so he's whining to a global authority that wishes it could trump our constitution.

      This shows exactly how hypocritical Ron Paul truly is, and why nobody took him seriously in *ANY* election.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    118. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by gravis777 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      From the article you linked to:

      is registering, trafficking in, or using a domain name with bad faith intent to profit from the goodwill of a trademark belonging to someone else. The cybersquatter then offers to sell the domain to the person or company who owns a trademark contained within the name at an inflated price.

      Um, yes, that is the defination of cybersquatting, according to the document that you linked to.

    119. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Khyber · · Score: 1

      And I've got no mod points for this (not that it mattered since I posted in the convo.)

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    120. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Um no. The parasites are the people who claim they are being virtuous by taking from productive citizens to give to the unproductive.
      Whether you like it or not, Ayn Rand was a productive writer. She paid into social security, she was entitled to receive the benefits.

      Oh, by the way, Social Security is not welfare. Or so we are supposed to believe. Why are you going against the party line, comrade?

    121. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Advocating a policy change doesn't bind one to it before that policy is enacted, because equal enforcement is a condition of any policy suggestion. Calling Ron Paul a hypocrite here is like calling Warren Buffet a hypocrite back when he suggested higher taxes that he didn't already donate.

    122. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by guynorton · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Rand wrote in "The Virtue of Selfishness".....that accepting any government controls is “delivering oneself into gradual enslavement.”

      Also....Rand is one of three women the Cato Institute calls founders of American libertarianism. The other two, Rose Wilder Lane and Isabel “Pat” Paterson, both rejected Social Security benefits on principle. Lane, with whom Rand corresponded for several years, once quit an editorial job in order to avoid paying Social Security taxes. The Cato Institute says Lane considered Social Security a “Ponzi fraud” and “told friends that it would be immoral of her to take part in a system that would predictably collapse so catastrophically.” Lane died in 1968....

      There's an even greater irony here in that she needed health care benefits >> Rand also believed that the scientific consensus on the dangers of tobacco was a hoax. By 1974, the two-pack-a-day smoker, then 69, required surgery for lung cancer. And it was at that moment of vulnerability that she succumbed to the lure of collectivism.

    123. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Tjp($)pjT · · Score: 1

      And it is not an inflated price. A good political mailing list can cost upwards of $10 for highly qualified names. This is 170,000 highly qualified names. Well worth the asking price. Worth upwards to 1.7 million. $250K is a bargain. Any politician in this day an age that doesn't control the like named domain is just not being smart enough to vote for. Or has a plain enough name someone else beat them to it. The democratic National Committee should but the domain and mailing list and give the website / domain to Ron minus the mailing list. knowing ones anti-constituents has value too. They can filter what the send them and cause disarray among that particular libertarian group.

      --
      - Tjp

      I am in wallow with my inner money grubbing capitalistic pig. ... Oink!

    124. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think it's really coming to this for a lot of people, myself included. The system is broken, but eventually I'm the fool for not taking advantage of it like everyone else, especially when I'm paying into it. I used to say, "No, I won't take advantage of it." Now it's closer to, "Fuck it. Everyone else is getting some, why shouldn't I?"

    125. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      OK. If she said that people shouldn't accept such money and then did so herself that would be hypocritical. Saying that government welfare shouldn't exist and then accepting government welfare wouldn't be - since it does exist and not accepting it doesn't change that fact.

      I don't know much about her - trivia about mediocre authors isn't high on my list of things to learn - so I'll accept the claim that she said people shouldn't do something that she herself did as true.

      I don't think the name is a valid argument though. The government doesn't much care what you nom de plume is when it comes to working out taxes and benefits.

    126. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Without being familiar with Ayn Rand, I'd guess it was the other things she said beyond "Work in your own self interest." She said more than that one line, right?

    127. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by ahoffer0 · · Score: 1

      The irony drips onto my tongue like drops of sweet honey. Best of all, irony is free.
      In all seriousness, $250K sounds like a fair deal. He should just pony up the scratch.

    128. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His district also pays millions in taxes to the federal government, It is his job to make sure they get back what they put in. He knows this and does his job.

    129. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, and only one house can have the address 2223 Rodeo Drive in a given city. There is no market for "2223 Rodeo Drive"s once someone has that address. Same with domain names. But with people finding web sites using search most of the time, domain names are becoming moot.

    130. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Joe+Snipe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So that's fine, use it. And keep complaining about said benefits existence, it's a valid argument. But by taking those benefits, you can no longer argue that those who do take advantage of said benefits are a drain on our society without being a drain yourself.

      --
      Sometimes, life itself is sarcasm...
    131. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by codepigeon · · Score: 1

      There is a word your (and apparently Ayn Rand's) actions: hypocrisy

    132. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's nothing. Brazil and Amazon.com are fighting over the .amazon TLD.

    133. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by megamerican · · Score: 1

      This is a very surprising and disappointing action from Paul -- a politician who once rarely (if ever) contradicted himself.

      Well you haven't been paying attention.

        As a member of congress he has repeatedly added amendments to spending bills giving millions to his home district. Then when the bill comes up for a vote, knowing that the bill is going to pass, he votes against the bill. That way he gets millions in pork for his constituents and at the same time can claim he voted against a wasteful spending bill.

      You mean, he is transparently giving back his constituent their own money for something useful to them? Isn't that what a Congressman is supposed to do?

      Otherwise, that money gets allocated by an unelected person from the executive branch. That's just what we need. More consolidation of power into the executive.

      --
      If you have something that you dont want anyone to know, maybe you shouldnt be doing it in the first place -Eric Schmidt
    134. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by interkin3tic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you speak out against something then partake of it, you're still undermining your own credibility unless you have a damn good reason why you're forced to.

    135. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the site is bullshit, it goes to the company. In this case, the side behind veronica.org was not bullshit, but it still happens quite often when people try to register the name of a popular brand and use the site as a facade for holding the domain name "hostage" (that's when the domain goes to the company). In the case of RP, the problem is more complicated, because it's not just his name, it's his entire online fan base! Buuut, he didn't build that fan base, so the current owners should be heavily compensated for their efforts.

    136. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      o really.. you're so far off base you aren't even in the fucking ballpark.

    137. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by CanHasDIY · · Score: 2, Informative

      From the article you linked to:

      is registering, trafficking in, or using a domain name with bad faith intent to profit from the goodwill of a trademark belonging to someone else. The cybersquatter then offers to sell the domain to the person or company who owns a trademark contained within the name at an inflated price.

      Um, yes, that is the defination of cybersquatting, according to the document that you linked to.

      No - you're failing to parse the definition of terms such as bad faith and trademark.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    138. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by zerosomething · · Score: 1

      Second that!

      --
      It all starts at 0
    139. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      To what do you speak? The U.N.? The U.S. is the largest dead beat nation in the U.N. and doesn't pay for basically anything.

    140. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait...what? Those are largely synonymous... And I thought it the other way 'round...

    141. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ideas/ideals are fine. Religion is not. Most Randians lean too far to the "religion" side of belief.

    142. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't even stand these discussions of anything remotely related to libertarianism anymore. So many idiot religious zealots with huge blind spots.

      Taking money after you pay in to the system? Not hypocrisy.

      Calling people who accept money from the system parasites, then surreptitiously accepting money from the system? Hypocrisy.

      Try to keep up.

    143. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by knobboy · · Score: 1

      I'm not a big Rand fan although I am a Libertarian, but why is it hypocritical for her to use the services her tax dollars paid for?

    144. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by detritus. · · Score: 1

      When you're forced to pay into it, you have every right to get it back.

    145. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realise the parent post was asked for citations of Ron Paul doing that, right?

      So what's the deal?

      Show evidence of the claim and it's invalid because they all do that? (in which case why ask for proof?) Or not show evidence and therefore claim that it was a lie (in which case why cry about giving proof?)

    146. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would be a hypocritical reversal if you had previously been calling for LA to opt out of having a police department entirely.

      An insurance claim for theft will require a police report just as a claim for fire will require a fire department report.

      No hypocrisy is required.

      I don't like being forced to use one waste hauler, does this make me a fucking hypocrit for using the service I bought?

    147. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by SolitaryMan · · Score: 1

      In this particular case it is not just that the name string-matches. The website is about him.

      If somebody else named Ron Paul regiestered the domain and started posting his vacation pictures or cats or whatever, Ron Paul The Congressman definitely wouldn't have a leg to stand on.

      Disclaimer: I don't support Ron Paul's move in this case (or care at all, for that matter), just pointing out that legally this *may* be a different case.

      --
      May Peace Prevail On Earth
    148. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any law against cybersquatting would be a government regulation. Government regulations are always bad, and should be avoided, according to Ron Paul.

    149. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

      What you mean is Microsoft put him in a position to either settle or be bankrupted.

      That is how these things work.

    150. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Couldn't your hint just imply that there are a lot of poor people in the United States?

    151. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's still not a "free market". It's a monopoly with a lot of choices. You buy from the government or no one at all.

      No you don't. You lease from resellers of ICANN, which is independent. The lease price is capped by government. If someone else owns the domain, you purchase the rights from that individual. It's also important to note that no one forces anybody to use the root nameservers. If you want to start your own TLD go right ahead. IT departments all around the world do this every day. Just tell your users where to point their browsers.

    152. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Just because the function of ridding domains of squatters is at the UN does not mean the rest of the UN's operations or conduct is legit.

      Except that (a) Ron Paul standards for a lack of outward interference from organizations like the UN and (b) there are options (ICE comes to mind) for trying to deal with domain name disputes that wouldn't require such outward interference. So, your analogy would be better served to, say, heavily criticize FBI involvement in internal State affairs and then calling up the FBI instead of the LA cops to deal with something within their purview of power.

      No, this really just smells like kowtowing to the UN because somehow Ron Paul thinks it looks better than mixing it in with ICE given just how much people have hostility about ICE precisely because it seems to usurp UN granted powers and be generally arbitrary--which seems to be the core platform of why so many Republicans don't want outward interference. Well, one can't really have it both ways and so Ron Paul really should make up his mind and not try playing both fields.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    153. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Nethemas+the+Great · · Score: 2

      I think you have those backwards.

      --
      Two of my imaginary friends reproduced once ... with negative results.
    154. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Owning something is owning something. Whatever you do with that property doesn't make it any more valid for you to own it.

    155. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you think that any old celebrity can come along, sell some albums and then they have the right to any domains that they share a name with? What exactly is your legal rationale for Madonna to be able to claim madonna.com?

    156. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously the one who is more popular, duh! Where'd you go to school where everything was always fair?

    157. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In most cases, the "speaking out" consists of explaining how inefficient and relatively ineffectual something is.

      In countries with socialized medicine, especially countries where non-socialized medicine is illegal, taking advantage of it while complaining it's not very good still makes sense. Sure, you want the chocolate bar, but when you're starving, if the only thing offered is a stick of butter, you'll still eat it.

      It's only if you outright reject even the slightest benefit that it makes sense not to partake in it. Thus why many libertarians avoid saying "XYZ government benefit provides absolutely no value, whereas my idea provides value" but rather phrase it as "XYZ government benefit only benefits this limited set of people, whereas my idea provides the benefit to this larger group (or everyone)".

    158. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really. Cybersquatting to me means obtaining a domain and parking on it knowing that someone wants it for a legitimate purpose for the sole benefit of selling said domain to the aforementioned party for a large (or not so large) sum of cash. That's not really the case here. I'm not really a fan of RP, and this sort of behavior doesn't really make me think any more of him than I did before. I strikes me as odd that he had no problem with the domain when it was created, nor when it was being used to promote his campaign. The folks who set it up obviously spent a lot of time and effort to do that ($250k worth ??? meh I don't know), but their time and effort is certainly worth something. He's being a jerk in my opinion and if he really wants it that bad he ought to just pay them what they want. In the grand scheme of things it's not that much money.

    159. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No, it's not.

      is registering, trafficking in, or using a domain name with bad faith intent to profit from the goodwill of a trademark belonging to someone else.

      In actuality, the owners of ronpaul.com were using it to help Mr. Paul, including raising millions of dollars in political donations for him.

      The cybersquatter then offers to sell the domain to the person or company who owns a trademark contained within the name at an inflated price.

      They're not just offering to sell him the domain, but the entire site and its mailing list of 170,000 names which they used to raise those millions of dollars for him, and which he could also use to raise additional millions of dollars if he wanted.

      Here's their response to his objections:

      Back in 2007 we put our lives on hold for you, Ron, and we invested close to 10,000 hours of tears, sweat and hard work into this site at great personal sacrifice. We helped raise millions of dollars for you, we spread your message of liberty as far and wide as we possibly could, and we went out of our way to defend you against the unjustified attacks by your opponents. Now that your campaigns are over and you no longer need us, you want to take it all away – and send us off to a UN tribunal?

      This has nothing to do with cybersquatting, by any definition.

    160. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Freddybear · · Score: 2

      If I speak out against what I consider to be excessive taxation, does that mean I don't have to pay those taxes? Does it make me a hypocrite for paying them?

    161. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      He's only a hypocrite if he refuses to recognize the notion of trademarks, and I don't think he ever did that. The issue at stake here is whether the current owner of the property in question is in fact owning it legally in the first place.

    162. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 0

      I don't see why he shouldn't get to at least force a RAND kind of deal. Most certainly, when I see a website using a domain name that matches the name of some person, that also provides various information about that person, I assume that it is their official website, and all that information has their support and approval - and I'd wager that most people would agree with me here. That's precisely why the domain registry has all these rules in place.

    163. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Redmancometh · · Score: 1

      Normally I would agree, but when you've paid for something you should use it. If I buy a webhost that forces me to pay for backup/support...if my site goes down I'm using it. Also in this bizarro world there is only one host...let's say theyre called bogaddy. It shouldnt undermine your complaints in that case, and I think the parallel is mostly valid. It does undermine your argument, but it shouldn't. I wish reality would throw idealism a bone...I think he's overcompensating.. Posted via phone..bye bye formatting.

    164. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by dwpro · · Score: 1

      I've never found that to be a compelling argument. If there were any legitimate scenario where forgoing earmarks would result in money back for _his_ district, that would be hypocrisy. Had he not fought for them, his district would have simply been funding the bloat of government to the benefit of everyone else, which is even further counter to his belief set. There are many legitimate reasons to criticize the guy, but this one rings hollow.

      --
      Millions long for immortality who do not know what to do with themselves on a rainy Sunday afternoon. -- Susan Ertz
    165. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      You are forced to pay your taxes and to pay into social security.
      It's the law.
      Seems a pretty good reason why you're forced to participate to me.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    166. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      The US pays 22% of the UN budget. They also withhold a certain amount that would go to certain UN programs which the US objects to.

    167. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Free market? What part of a government monopoly on providing domain names seems free market to you?

      ICANN is a private company. It is not the government. But that's not even relevant, because ICANN is not the registered owner of the domain in question. Another private entity owns the domain, and has set the price for it, as any private entity in a free market can do with any scarce good that they control.

    168. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait a minute. Is this Michael Bolton?

    169. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Kreigaffe · · Score: 2

      To be fair, Social Security is pretty indistinguishable from a Ponzi scheme.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    170. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by rsborg · · Score: 1

      What you mean is he wants to use force to make someone give him their property.

      I disagree with the MikeRoweSoft.com thing even more. It was clearly nothing like microsoft.com. Anyone who would be confused by that would be too stupid to type.

      Clearly, Microsoft was prescient enough to visage the future creation of the iPhone, then Siri, who would have no problem confusing the two sites. With that kind of future knowledge, I'm pretty sure I would have made the same decision as MSFT legal.

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    171. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tnk1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Saying it over and over again doesn't make it true.

      If I beat you up for your lunch money, and then offered to give it back to you, would you go without lunch despite the fact that you are of the belief that you shouldn't have your lunch money taken away in the first place? Hardly.

      Of all the things to beat up Ayn Rand about, it seems like people like to flock to the weakest criticism just so they can use the word "hypocrisy". For that matter, hypocrisy isn't even a logical fallacy. You can be a complete hypocrite and still be correct with your assertion, it is just problematic to use yourself as an exemplar of your ideas in action if you are. If a killer preaches to you about the value of life, you'd probably think he was a hypocrite, but I doubt that you would then think that he's wrong about his assertion.

      Ayn Rand could be a poor Objectivist, which is debatable, but that doesn't mean Objectivism is wrong.

    172. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      Please read the last part of my one-line post. You have a good case to make the claim that you're forced to pay it, and thus are not a hypocrite. I covered that.

    173. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      You're not being forced to take the social security payments.

    174. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      So if I'm forced to participate in Social Security by paying payroll taxes, why is it hypocritical to accept the benefits of that participation?

    175. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by detritus. · · Score: 1

      This is yet another chapter in the tale of Ron Paul's subtle hypocrisy. He'll complain about globalization and fight against having any global authorities interfering in private citizens' lives, yet he has no problem running to a global authority to interfere in other people's lives on his behalf.

      The very nature of the internet is global in scope. There's no rights to specific ones and zeroes that transcend the domain name system, as well as trademark and copyright. When you register a domain name, it's a contract and there's regulations on what it can and cannot be used for. I'm sure if Ron Paul could avoid an international regulatory board to have this resolved, he would have.

    176. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For that matter, hypocrisy isn't even a logical fallacy.

      Huh? It's the ultimate logical fallacy; it's a contradiction.

      Rand herself said "Contradictions do not exist. Whenever you think that you are facing a contradiction, check your premises. You will find that one of them is wrong."

      If you say you believe something and then act in a manner contrary to that belief, then you don't really believe what you say you do. Actions speak louder than words.

      You can argue anything from a contradiction. As Bertrand Russell reputedly said, "Given 2 = 1, prove that you're the Pope." "The Pope and I are two. But two equals one. Therefore, the Pope and I are one."

    177. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by The+Archon+V2.0 · · Score: 1

      > She said more than that one line, right?

      (Looks at 1000+ page doorstop that is Atlas Shrugged.)

      You could say that, yes.

    178. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, you are a colossal faggot.

    179. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by retchdog · · Score: 2

      there are fallacies apart from deductive logical fallacies. if someone offers a prescriptive moral system, it seems reasonable to evaluate it by whether its adherents can follow the system consistently. for example, let's consider the prescription of catholic priests not marrying. sure, it makes sense; no wife means closer to god (if `god' is uncomfortable to you, replace it with `studies' or `devotion'). great, except now they sodomize little boys. there's no logical fallacy there, but it does suggest that the moral system is inadequate in the face of human nature.

      it would be quite easy for me to devise a perfectly logical way of life, which is nonetheless too strenuous or silly for 99%+ or even 100% of the population to obey. further, if, in fact, the system i develop is too difficult for me to adhere to, it does suggest that it's not very realistic to expect anyone else to.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    180. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pedant here. You, sir are incorrect. It will cost what someone pays for it. You can ask whatever price you wish, but the cost only is incurred when there is a transaction.

      Otherwise, spot in.

    181. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Maritz · · Score: 3

      To be fair, anyone with a functioning brain should be able to distinguish between them quite easily. Unless of course you're ideologically inclined to equate them because you feel it vindicates your a-priori position.

      --
      I do not want your cheap brainburning drugs. They are useless for work. And I am a working man today.
    182. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A humorous and similar situation, although a different form of intellectual propety:

      After the Warner Brothers' famous movie "Casablanca" starring Bogart came out, the Marx Brother's came out with a movie called "A Night in Casablanca". Warner Brothers sued the Marx Brothers for use of "Casablanca". The Marx Brothers counter-sued for use of "Brothers"

    183. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Shark · · Score: 1

      I read somewhere that ICANN can recommend the UN as an arbitrator in cases where one of the parties in the dispute isn't a US entity, as is the case now according to WHOIS. That could be a lawyer-made decision and not a case of Ron Paul going straight to the UN as a solution to his problem. I don't know that for sure but it seems more plausible to me than someone like RP heading straight to the UN.

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
    184. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 2

      He doesn't get to force anything. He has no legal standing for this website.

      He didn't register it. He didn't create it. He didn't update it. He didn't do anything for it.

      It doesn't matter if it's a pro-Ron Paul website, a farcical Ron Paul website, or pointing out all of his errors.

      It's not his.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    185. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by retchdog · · Score: 1

      no, you don't understand. this is ron paul we're talking about. since ron paul is, by definition, opposed to everything bad and in support of everything good, there must instead be a problem with semantics.

      ah yes, there it is! sure it says ``trademark,'' which literally refers to a registered device for identifying products or services, but what it really means is the totality of someone's likeness, which is the most private of properties because it recapitulates one's own intellect and character!

      phew. glad we resolved that! it's just like the case of those racist newsletters. sure, it looked like either ron paul was aware of it, or was a total idiot who didn't know what his campaign was doing in his own name, but then he cleared it up for us: racism is a form of collectivism, so obviously it would have been impossible for ron paul to have anything to do with it. it follows logically, don'tcha know.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    186. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Shark · · Score: 1

      ICANN likely referred him to the UN as an arbitrator because the current ronpaul.com is curently owned in Panama, that is, outside of US juridiction. I understand that you have an axe to grind against Paul and that you would jump to conclusions but at least do some research into the matter first.

      I think it's a stupid move on his part turning into a complete PR disaster, but this isn't as clean-cut a case of hypocrisy as you would have hoped. Personally, I think this has more to do with Paul telling a legal firm to do whatever they can fix it and them not taking into account the implications of accepting the UN as an arbitrator. Still a stupid move, but not like he just up and decided to go cry to the UN because someone has 'his' domain name.

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
    187. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Ugh, dude - if you're going to masturbate, at least have the common courtesy to do that shit in private...

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    188. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Kreigaffe · · Score: 2

      The defining characteristic of a Ponzi scheme is as follows.

      You take money from people and tell them they'll get more back later.
      In order to pay those people back, you use money you've taken from other people, using the same promises.

      And that's it! That's your Ponzi scheme. Take money, skim some off the top, just make sure you keep getting more money from either old customers or new money from new ones so that you stay solvent. ...in other words, Social Security.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    189. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      Well of course not -- if you want to have your money taken from you and then not receive it back when offered, you're free to be your own fool.

      But it's too late at that point, because you've already participated.

      Actually, taking payments is NOT participating. When you're taking Social Security payments, you are *no longer* participating in Social Security, but rather simply receiving the money which you previously had been forced to hand over to the government -- it is that money coming off your paycheck that is participating in Social Security, not withdrawing that money.

      You are forced to participate, and only an idiot would not seek to regain the money they were forced to hand over to Social Security.

      Hypocrisy would be decrying the Social Security system and then participating were there an option to not participate -- but there is not, there is only an option to not receive payments, but that's after your participation in the program has ended.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    190. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by CanHasDIY · · Score: 0

      From what I read, the $250 large is for the mailing list, not the domain, and the owner of the site is stating that this is a package deal. Don't like the deal? Don't buy the package.

      It really is as simple as that.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    191. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except now they sodomize little boys.

      or girls...

    192. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Shark · · Score: 1

      Actually, the court will have to decide on that, not you.

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
    193. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Burning1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I found a source on the internet quoting the worth of Ayn Rand's estate at ~$500,000 at the time of her death. It's unclear how much of that was tied up in property, how much of it was the value of her writings, and how much of it was liquid. What is clear is that her declining health and battle with cancer could have had a significant impact on her wealth.

      So, Ayn Rand spent most of her life smoking, and when she was diagnosed with Cancer, she turned to Medicare to protect her estate.

      Do you know what Ayn would have called someone who made devastating life decisions and then turned to the government for salvation?

    194. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by retchdog · · Score: 1

      yeah, i know, man; i have the same reaction to the internet adulation of ron paul.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
    195. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "She said more than that one line, right?"

      (Looks at 1000+ page doorstop that is Atlas Shrugged.)

      You could say that, yes.

      And yet, the entire philosophy boils down to:

      1) Government bad because you're being enslaved
      2) Work in your own self interest because altruism is for pussies
      3) To hell with everybody else

      If you know someone beginning to read it, smack them about the head with your copy of Atlas Shrugged until they can't remember what they were talking about.

      Sooner or later, they all become rabid drooling fanbois who feel they (and they alone) possess Truth. I've never seen a group so dogmatically irrational as these guys -- because clearly Rand did all of the thinking to perfection, so all they have to do is cite it as Self Evident Truth. If you can't see it for what it is, then the problem lies in you, no the philosophy.

    196. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Actually, he is going through WIPO for their Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy which was added to the UN in 1974. The reason he is using WIPO is because it deals with what is called intellectual property and has been used in several high profile cases.

      There might be other avenues. But this is the logical one.

      http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/guide/index.html

    197. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by flaming+error · · Score: 1

      So, as an alternative to all this UN mess, Ron Paul could offer these guys membership in the Ludwig von Mises Institute and an XBox. It's a win-win.

    198. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by N0Man74 · · Score: 1

      You would... if you got the name first, and proved that you were using it and not parking it.

      Now, it may end up that you don't have the money to fight the battle to prove that, in which case, you may lose.

      My gut feeling would be whoever had a better lawyer would get it. I've seen some ridiculous rulings when it comes to rights to use a name.

      I remember a story about 10 years ago where there was an author who published a book under his real name.

      By coincidence, there was a musician (whom I never heard of) that was using the same name as the author as his stage name. The musician heard about the book and sued the author.

      Well, the author lost the case. The author was no longer allowed to publish books under his real name, because it happened to be the same as the one that the musician decided to take as a stage name.

      Even though the musician wasn't publishing books and the author wasn't publishing music, and even though the author was born with the name first...

    199. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Domain names are not an inherently scarce good. The fact that anyone is arguing over a "dot com" is a direct result of government regulation. I think regulation here is probably helpful, but that does not make it a "free market".

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    200. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tnk1 · · Score: 2

      It is not a contradiction to believe something, but have a great deal of difficulty in achieving it personally. I can believe that the best way to attain a healthy weight is to eat well and exercise regularly, but I may well remain overweight because I have difficulty overcoming my urges to eat unhealthy amounts of unhealthy food.

      I agree, such a person is not going to make a good role model, and one could actually ask whether that goal is even possible if even the "prophet" of that idea can't do it, but in no way does the failure of that person by itself, mean that the idea is wrong.

      I'll say it again, hypocrisy contributes nothing to the truth value of the assertion by itself. It may be an indicator of trouble, for sure, but it is not a direct argument against some proposition.

    201. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      which is independent.

      That's a technicality. The US government created ICANN, set up the rules for ICANN, and retains ultimate authority over ICANN.

      It's also important to note that no one forces anybody to use the root nameservers

      No, that's not important. A de-facto monopoly affects Ron Paul in exactly the same way as a mandated monopoly. Ron Paul cannot realistically expect people to jump to an alternate DNS system just for his web site.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    202. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Patch86 · · Score: 2

      Is that worse than ignoring the cost and focusing only on the measurable good of government programs?

      You pay for what you get, and you get what you pay for. The US does not spend more per household than other major economies. As a factor of GDP, it spends particularly little. If you exclude military spending (the US spends as much on the military as the next 10 countries combined), it looks even rosier.
      http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f5/2010_National_Spending_of_the_USA_compared_to_G20.jpg
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government_spending#As_a_percentage_of_GDP

      The only countries which spend notably less are poverty states and failed states. If you (and Ron Paul) think the US would be better off with the tax/spend model used by Somalia, Burma and Turkmenistan rather than the model used by China, Norway and the United Kingdom, then you're going to need some fairly weighty facts to back it up.

    203. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      As I said elsewhere in this thread, I don't disagree with this kind of regulation. But I also don't pretend it is a free market.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    204. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Your point is well taken, but even in the specific case of showing whether something is a reasonable path to take, the founder's ability to follow their own path still reduces to an anecdote. That is why specific hypocrisy is not useful in these discussions.

      More to the point, such hypocrisy and its use in arguments goes for the "gotcha" moment, more than it encourages objective discussion of the merits of the principle or the idea being suggested. In that way, it is an attack on a person, instead of an idea. Admittedly, the person in question is the central proponent of the theory, but there are many reasonable situations where such a person could suffer a disconnect between theory and practice.

      Take for example world peace. Most people want it, but no one seems to be able to do what it takes to get it. Does that mean peace is not a desirable feature, or is it merely outside of our current abilities to achieve? And, if peace is actually undesirable, or difficult to attain, what objectively makes it so? You can't be telling me that if a Nobel Peace Prize winner and peace activist suddenly became a local warlord in Africa that you believe that peace is concept that has failed, do you? I presume (and hope), you would demand evidence such as studies and empirical evidence that humans are unable to achieve what we have yet to achieve successfully.

    205. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I'm not a lawyer, but the trademark law might disagree with you here.

    206. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So that's fine, use it. And keep complaining about said benefits existence, it's a valid argument. But by taking those benefits, you can no longer argue that those who do take advantage of said benefits are a drain on our society without being a drain yourself.

      But that's not what anybody is arguing. What we're saying (not arguing since it's an obvious fact) is that social security is unsustainable. So instead of making up positions for the other side in an attempt to claim moral superiority, let's get to work fixing the problem.

    207. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

      You're playing with semantics. You're taking good parts. If you say social security isn't needed, then lead by example and do without it.

    208. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Either way, it's clearly not a "free market". I was defending Ron Paul (whom I don't actually like that much) from people claiming that he's being hypocritical here. I can't imagine how one could consider the DNS to be a "free market", so I don't see any hypocrisy. Hypocrisy would be him using his influence to have tax credits applied to a failing local business, or something along those lines. In this story, he's appealing to bureaucracy to fix a dispute in a heavily regulated corner of IP law (which itself is a government interference in the free market).

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    209. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by infinitelink · · Score: 1

      You might be able to as long as you're paying more than you use and they are not; or the outlays to some are more than actual inlays from others; and that doesn't even get into defining "society", what few necessities government is required to furnish thereto, and what benefits vs. drains on it (I would argue those have more to do with traditional moral items, which makes it quite comical to watch the progressive "liberals" fight with the Randian "liberals" who happen to have coalitioned with the "moral" Republicans).

      Why is this modded "insightful"?

      I am not opposed, by the way, to help of the needy by government where private society hasn't stepped-in. I am opposed to the trainwreck which is current discernment, thought, and standards of supposedly sound judgment.

      --
      Intelligent idiots are we. | Evil men do not understand justice.
    210. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Golddess · · Score: 1

      Yes.

      Like squares and rectangles, all congresscritters are hypocrites, but not all hypocrites are congresscritters. ;)

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    211. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by infinitelink · · Score: 1

      And why is this insightful? The url in question is used for a site unpretensiously all about the same Ron Paul who is now going after it. ICANN has rules against grabbing and holding urls merely for trying to extort funds out of someone else. With all the chatter about Rand et. al. people seem to willfully forget that Paul is a libertarian, but not an individualist one: he was a doctor and spent campaign capital on countering "collectivist" arguments in favor of so-called "universal health care" on the premise that government insuring payments to doctors and hospitals means that the prices (as happened with Universities once student loans came easy) would skyrocket because people are greedy (which was implied, its signification being "this is not good", unlike the Randians) and favoring "community" approaches as existed in his day, that doctors and practitioners in the medical fields worked with patients on payments and ensured one way or another that they would be treated.

      --
      Intelligent idiots are we. | Evil men do not understand justice.
    212. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      What legal standing do you think he has in order to go to any court with?

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    213. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Also, a better name might be:

      ForDevil.com

      Could also be capitalized like:
      FordEvil.com

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    214. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      This is why you just GOTTA love this, the irony is so moist and delicious. I mean here you have the guy the libertarians practically worship as a god...and he's trying to pull an eminent domain rather than pay the market value for something he wants!

      To me this just shows the true stripes of many of those that claim to be libertarians as its all about greed. Most of the time they think they can get more wealth by getting governments out of the way but if it works in their favor? Fuck it they want more and more and MOAR!

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    215. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      If someone wrote a book about another person, and put that persons name in the "by line", then that's wrong (assuming the true author was not also named Ron Paul). It's not an autobiography.

      If this was "peopleforronpaul.com" then I'd say he should take a hike. But they're using HIS NAME. The fact that they are supporters and not detractors has nothing to do with it, they shouldn't be doing it.

    216. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which any half decent squatter would do.

      as a paul supporter, the first time I visited ronpaul.com was when the "news" about ron paul really being a democrat and going to the u.n. broke.

    217. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 1

      My four year old son frequently espouses various beliefs such as "Brushing teeth is stupid, I'm not brushing my teeth any more". While it might be educational for him to have a cavity or two and endure some unpleasant dental work, we usually just ignore his ignorant world view and brush his teeth for him because we know better.

      This seems to fit rather well for the republican party right now. They will clue in one day, but until then, someone needs to be responsible for them.

    218. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm also a Paul supporter, but I completely agree with this. I'm not entirely certain he's all that well-versed in property rights as they pertain to domain names. I also agree with other commenters that $250k isn't really all that unreasonable either considering they're offering up the content and (presumably) the code that runs the site.

    219. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      If someone wrote a book about another person, and put that persons name in the "by line", then that's wrong (assuming the true author was not also named Ron Paul). It's not an autobiography.

      What.
      The.
      Fuck.
      Are.
      You.
      On.
      About.

      Are you actually trying to say that nobody is allowed to title a book "Ron Paul" except the politician of the same name? Or do you misunderstand the term "byline" to mean "author's name?" If the former, you can't be serious. If the latter, you should retake Comp 101.

      Of course, since the website in question clearly states

      Copyright © 2008 - 2016 RonPaul.com. This website is maintained by independent grassroots supporters. It is not paid for, approved or endorsed by Ron Paul

      There's really no brand confusion at all, save perhaps among a handful of morons who obviously don't know enough about how websites work to be making commentary about them.

      If this was "peopleforronpaul.com" then I'd say he should take a hike. But they're using HIS NAME.

      ... and it matters not a fuck. If he wants the domain, he can pay for it just like anyone else would have to. Period, end of story.

      FYI, a person does not automatically get dominion over a particular arrangement of letters, just because that arrangement happens to be the name they go by. Think for a second - were that the case, every single goddamn website on the planet would owe tribute to Kim Dotcom.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    220. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Property rights are the foundation of all rights in a free society unless the property we're talking about are domain names that you feel are yours, right Senator Paul?

      Domain names aren't property, though. They're a service provided by DNS servers to direct users to IP addresses. The duty of the DNS system is to direct users to the addresses that the users most likely want. Not to set up a tradable marketplace in imaginary property.

    221. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 0

      Exactly, Randians think the Free market is a magical cure all (Even though we already tried that, it was called "the age of the robber barons" and was a LOT like feudalism) and rail about how SS and medicare/aid should be abolished (along with pretty much ALL aid to the poor and defenseless, they are very "dog eat dog") yet there was their queen taking Social Security and making up bullshit justifications on how it didn't make her a hypocrite (Protip: It did make her a hypocrite) .

      But this is even more juicy as Ron Paul has railed against eminent domain for ages, and how the free markets should be respected above all...except when he doesn't get what he wants then he can pull eminent domain with no problem apparently, fuck the free markets.

      So I think this is it as far as Ron Paul is concerned as all his bullshit has just been shown to be just that, bullshit that he believes when it benefits HIM but not when it'll cost him precious dollars. Its just a damned shame this didn't happen a decade ago before so many were duped into supporting his hypocrite ass with their time and money. Oh well a fool and their money and all that.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    222. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by kqs · · Score: 1

        As a member of congress he has repeatedly added amendments to spending bills giving millions to his home district. Then when the bill comes up for a vote, knowing that the bill is going to pass, he votes against the bill. That way he gets millions in pork for his constituents and at the same time can claim he voted against a wasteful spending bill.

      But that's clearly not contradicting himself. Since he is representing his constituents, he needs to improve money flow to his district. The money will be spent anyways, so it's better if it goes to his good salt-of-the-earth constituents rather than some godless homosexuals somewhere. Plus, by voting against those bills, he proves that...

      Yeah, I can't write that with a straight face. It's kinda like the people who earnestly explain why Ayn Rand wasn't a hypocrite for receiving Medicare benefits. If you are a True Believer, mere facts are like putty to your Superior Rationalization^H^H^H^H^H^Hty.

    223. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I ... think that's actually okay. As long as he's voting against the wasteful spending, it's fair for him to make sure that his home district gets as much of the pork as any other. If all the other members of congress (or even just half of them) did the same, the bill would fail, which is (hopefully) his ideal case.

    224. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      So if I'm forced to participate in Social Security by paying payroll taxes, why is it hypocritical to accept the benefits of that participation?

      It's perfectly legal, and not necessarily immoral; after all, you paid in so you're entitled.

      However, if you insult, denigrate or mock others who accept those benefits then playground rules 23 a(ii) and (iii) apply, namely "You said it so that's you" and "I know you are, but what am I?" respectively.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    225. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by PoolOfThought · · Score: 1

      No one is arguing what you say they are... well, maybe some idiots, but certainly not anywhere near the majority of those who would rather have fewer programs or better managed ones. The drain is those who take a benefit and NEVER pay in when they are capable. Another drain is those who decide that they'd rather just take their benefit than actually do some work to help themselves.

      Truthfully, I know lots of conservatives, some who lean far more right than I do, but I don't know a single conservative who thinks that no one should ever take benefits that they've paid into and are actually qualified to accept. I've got family who lost a job and while I strongly oppose the so easily gamed systems that we have in place today of unemployment and medicaid you better believe that when they were eligible I suggested that they take full advantage of the programs to help them get by... not to make it a way of life mind you... but to get by. I also encouraged them to find ways to get back on their own feet and not become complacent.

      I've got other family members who have decided it's easier to just sit around all day and collect disability for ailments that don't actually keep them from doing work! They didn't every try to get a job while they were getting unemployment checks (for 2 years) and then decided it was nice to just not have to go to work and they'd become accustomed to living off the checks the government provided... so they gamed the system for disability and actually got a raise to sit at home and do nothing. What's worse is some ways is that these people still go to work and do jobs getting paid under the tableand pay no taxes into the system) all the while getting healthcare (ER) and free meals. These people are a drain and it's by choice.

      Your argument is horseshit. I'm sure there's a real debate label for it, but horseshit will do just fine. You're completely wrong to tell me or others that because I'm willing to say that someone should make use of a program they've paid into that I can't also call out those who are misusing the same said programs. I can be pro immigration, but anti amnesty. And I can be pro safety net, but anti nanny state. I can still advantage of foodstamps when I'm starving, but be against using them to buy TVs (or trading them for cash). I can be for unemployment insurance, but not for 2 years or even 1 year or even 6 months of pay.

      --
      My present is the activity I am currently engaged in with the purpose of turning the future into a better past.
    226. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Because it makes you full of shit as you are benefiting from the very thing you CLAIM you are against? If you are truly against it have some fucking balls and stand up and be counted, otherwise you are just another Internet blowhard who doesn't put their money where their mouths are.

      This is why even though I don't believe the same as her I respect the hell out of Joan Baez, she figured up when she was protesting Vietnam how much of her taxes would go to pay for bullets and bombs and she has not paid that EVER. she goes to jail about twice a decade until somebody decides to pay her fine but not a single cent of her money has paid for a single bullet or bomb to be used on another human being.

      So if you are gonna talk the talk you need to walk the walk, otherwise you can just sit in the hypocrite box and be seen for being full of shit. you don't even have to go to jail for your beliefs as she does, if you truly believe in libertarian ideals then you can give that money to a local charity as libertarians support local control. But if you cash those checks and put them in your pocket you need to STFU as you are just spouting bullshit, you are gaining more than you put in while bitching about what little they took out, based on the average lifespan today VS the amount they take.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    227. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not a contradiction to believe something, but have a great deal of difficulty in achieving it personally.

      That's true - Christians prove it everyday.

      It's another thing, though, to insist as Rand did that principles are more important than practical concerns, are inviolable because you forfeit your integrity, and that this is evil and no compromise is permitted... then go ahead and do it anyway.

    228. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      There is a word your (and apparently Ayn Rand's) actions: hypocrisy

      Not really. Using a service you are forced to pay for while working to remove that service is just getting what you're paying for.

      Hypocrisy would be railing against a service while still using it if not paying for the service was an option. If you are required by the government to buy something, you might as well get your money's worth. Otherwise that's just a donation, which is even more against Objectivist ideals.

      (Note: not a libertarian, don't like objectivism, just wanted to clarify their ideals though)

    229. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      But due to the ever expanding lifespan many will end up living long enough to take more than they gave so if you truly believe its wrong to live off the government dole the SECOND you get back what you put in you should reject every other cent. Give it to charity, tear up the checks, do as you will be if you take a single penny more than you gave...you are the parasite, just as Ayn Rand sitting on her money while medicare paid for her cancer treatment was a parasite.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    230. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      Because she spent her entire life saying people who accepted help from the government (or anyone) were parasites.

      In the end, Ayn Rand because the kind of parasite she spent her life waging jihad against. Yet she never apologized or admitted she was wrong. She simply sponged up those Big Gubment welfare checks.

      You'll probably enjoy this 2010 article The Truth About the Tea Party - commonly referred to as "Tea and Crackers" that interviews (mainly) old, white people railing against government hand-outs from their Medicare paid-for electric wheelchairs.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    231. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 1

      If you speak out against something then partake of it, you're still undermining your own credibility unless you have a damn good reason why you're forced to.

      The fact that they took the money that you could have otherwise been diverting to pay for retirement (or other purpose, depending on which program you're talking about) yourself is a pretty good reason. If when you reach retirement age, you can't afford to live without the government handout -- well, things could very well have been different if they hadn't been taking 12 percent of your wages to cover it your entire working life.

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    232. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      This is where I point out that Social Security is not Welfare unless it is, for the purposes of Democrats who want to call Libertarians names.

    233. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      Actually, he is going through WIPO for their Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy which was added to the UN in 1974. The reason he is using WIPO is because it deals with what is called intellectual property and has been used in several high profile cases.

      So, he wants to go through the World Intellectual Property Organization? Sounds like an outside organization to me. And before you say something about the US being bound under the WIPO because of US treaties or something similar--the same could be said about the UN--, the general point stands that Ron Paul and like-minded individuals precisely wish to undo such treaties and such intertwining international interests. Besides, as you note, the WIPO is part of the UN (it is after 1974) and that is presumably because the UN is a header organization for a lot of sub-organization which all function as international intertwining agents.

      There might be other avenues. But this is the logical one.

      Funny. Last I checked, .com is controlled by Verisign and Verisign is wholly bound by US law as the .com servers are in US territory--again hence the whole ICE/UN(WIPO) concerns and many people wanting more UN (or other body) control. To say it's the "logical" avenue only works if one presumes that one considers that the US is and should be subordinate to the wishes of the WIPO (and considering how the US seems willing to ignore the WTO, a similar organization, over gambling...). Nah, it's only logical if one considers it acceptable to pander to the WIPO when it's convenient, damn one's prior espoused convictions or belief that there's another way.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    234. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 1

      In this story, he's appealing to bureaucracy to fix a dispute in a heavily regulated corner of IP law (which itself is a government interference in the free market).

      Yeah. He wants the government to confiscate that IP from its owner under threat of force, and then give it to himself as an entitlement.

      That make him a big, fat HYPOCRITE.

      Whether you define the market where that value is traded as "free" is irrelevant. Money is money.

    235. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      At least one famous person shares my name. Which one of us owns the dot com rights?

      If the site is about you, then you own it. If it's about the famous person, then the famous person may have rights to it.

    236. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. What you paid to the government barely covers the wage of a policeman. Yet you use every single other social services such as roads, educations, judges, etc. Your payment to the government isn't there to cover the benefits you take back. It's to pay for all the services that you consume daily.

    237. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      "Ayn Rand" was her pen name. She was married to Frank O'Connor, and it probably would have been ILLEGAL for her to apply for benefits under the name Ayn Rand.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    238. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      You know, if the government made me pay for a benefit, then I'm damn well going to use it.

      They made you pay for somebody else's benefit, not yours. If you demand a benefit, they're just making somebody down the pyramid pay for yours.

      That whole schlock about Social Security being a savings or insurance plan was deep-sixed by the Supreme Court more than thirty years ago. It's a tax and spend program, plain and simple (and SCOTUS concurs).

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    239. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      You also just described insurance which many libertarians see as a panacea...do you consider insurance a Ponzi scheme as well? After all they aren't just paying out what you put in it, you can pay 30k in on a million dollar policy and if the event happens (death, building burns, whatever) and they pay up they certainly haven't just handed you your 30K back, they are taking money from those that have paid in but not collected anything and handing it to you.

      Frankly I think libertarians love the words "Ponzi Scheme" the way the right wing loved the word communism back in the 50s, as they seem to see them everywhere.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    240. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      You're playing an idiot. If it's not needed, then you should not pay into it. You are forced to pay into it, and thus at the very least you must withdraw the amount you put in and leave yourself even.

      To not withdraw anything would be providing money into the system that you disagree with, thus funding it, thus supporting it.

      Taking more than you put in? That could be hypocrisy.. but in light of the fact that you MUST contribute, you are already supporting the system, and you can't NOT withdraw else you leave yourself in a poorer position than you would have otherwise been in had you not been required to contribute to the system.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    241. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      thanks to the magic of psychology-driven Austrian economics, he can just forget about the economic problems before the Fed existed, because they were just so long ago.

      Incorrect.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    242. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      They aren't asking for millions, just a paltry 250K.

      I suggested to one of the operators of the site that they host a money bomb. $250K has been less than the first 24 hours of most Ron Paul money bombs.

      "Ron Paul needs your help to show him the power of the free market over government solutions." Yeah, I'd be in for $5.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    243. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Kreigaffe · · Score: 1

      Yep, I agree. Simply taking payments from something you speak out against is, then, not hypocritical -- not by itself. That was the point I was making. You're forced to participate in the program, there is no option to not participate, and refusing all payments (which are, actually, RE-payments of the money you had been paying while working) is not refusing the system but rather it is participating in the system by funding it and then refusing to take back what you gave.

      In fact, if you don't like Social Security, not taking any payments at all is actually supportive of the system -- since it would lead to more money in the system than had you actually not participated.

      I'm not even going to weigh in on whether it's good or bad. I'm just not going to sit back while someone makes logically flawed arguments to denigrate somebody they don't like, that's all.

      --
      ... still waiting for this free-as-in-beer free beer I keep hearing about. :|
    244. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      And this is why I'd take full blown communism over libertarianism, because at its root its a vicious belief system. I remember the stories my grandparents told me of what it was like before the new deal, my own father never had to worry about the draft because he had to work in the fields with a badly broken leg because his family couldn't afford to take him to a doctor or survive the winter without every child that could walk and follow basic instructions out in the field so his leg never healed correctly and bothers him to this very day. Great grandma talked of entire families riding the rails like nomads, just trying to find enough to eat and many children ended up blind of brain damaged simply because they couldn't get enough nutrients.

      So i could never support a "fuck you, I got mine you get yours" philosophy because it at its roots ignores how much of those advantages are nothing but accidents of birth. You think if Mitt Romney had been born to a dirt poor family in Alabama he would be so rich now? What are the odds Ron Paul would have gotten where he is if he were born black? If both were born in one of the war torn African nations do you think they'd have a pot to piss in or a window to throw it out of? No too much ends up coming down to which womb you come out of and I can't in good conscience punish someone for something they had no choice about. Then again that is why I'll never be rich, even if I won the lotto I would have to help those around me that were suffering as there just isn't enough greed in me to ignore that.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    245. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Correct me if I'm wrong but I thought the site was more about championing libertarianism, which Ron Paul has simply been one of the most visible faces in that fight.

      But at the end of the day it honestly doesn't matter WHY they set up the site as Ron Paul has been one of the most outspoken opponents of governments and agencies taking things without paying "market rates" for them and he has said a billion times that individual property rights are what its all about so here when given a chance to walk the walk he shows what a hypocrite he is by using an agency to try to take by force something which does not belong to him rather than pay market value.

      If that isn't "do as I say, not as I do" and a complete slap in the face to libertarian beliefs then WTF is folks? To me it looks like he only walks the walk when it benefits HIM and when it doesn't he's happy to do a 180.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    246. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      A huge chunk of that is the cost of, or paying interest on the debt accumulated by, the military, war and killing people in other countries our government doesn't like.

      You don't know that to be true and are just saying it, because in your world making claims is more important than knowing what you are talking about.

      You know how I know that you don't know its true? Because I, unlike you, didnt just decide to make shit the fuck up. I have looked at the numbers because they are public knowledge and shit... something you could have done yesterday, the day before, the day before that, the day before that, ... how many years of willful and deliberate ignorance backs your bullshit flapping of the mouth?

      For your information, the Federal government accounts for less than half of the government spending done on your behalf. Diidn't fucking know that, did ya? Yet here you are talking about some fraction of the federal budget like its some sort of holy amount that is suppose to turn off the critical thinking of the people that listen to your dogmatic bullshit.

      You are a useless American because you are a willfully ignorant shithead that acts like an authority when you know full well that you don't know what the fuck you are talking about. Thats right.. your ignorance makes me angry.. because fuck you for ruining the country.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    247. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You seem to be confusing libertarian for anarchist. Libertarians believe in due process.

    248. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      You pay for what you get, and you get what you pay for. The US does not spend more per household than other major economies.

      2010, the OECD numbers for total government spending in the United States was $6.134 trillion dollars. The 2010 census reports 115 million households. Thats $53,043 per household.

      Which 1st world country did you have in mind that spends more per household?

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    249. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      If you're making an argument that she was bad at following her own philosophy, it's definitely a possibility.

      But when discussing Objectivism in general, it may be more illustrative to remove her from the equation.

      That said, I don't know whether Objectivism is all that great, but I have a great deal of difficulty keeping my mouth shut when people start using "proof by hypocrisy".

    250. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Ziggitz · · Score: 1

      (hint: In the United States, the governments spends more per household than the median income of households)

      Statistically this statement is meaningless in the context of the point you are trying to make. Go look up the difference between mean and median. Then go learn about income inequality.

      --
      There is no memory shortage. yes I have heard of XFCE. Go away.
    251. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Much as I'd like to kick Ron Paul, on account of the man being a lunatic asshole -- and I haven't read up on all his positions -- but I'm pretty sure he's never come down heavily in defense of identity theft.

      These people are using his name. His name is his property, not theirs. I see no inconsistency in his appealing to relevant agencies to enforce his rights over it.

    252. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the site were called "randomlibertariannutjob.com", would it have built the same level of success?

      It's built on recognition of his name, which he spent a lifetime building up. If that's not 'doing anything for it', what is?

    253. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

      Is there no end to the level of cognitive dissonance that you are willing to accept to preserve your image of your idol?

    254. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

      Perhaps that's rude and abrupt, but guess what? It never was yours. All that effort of yours? You donated it. If that donation proves to have been to someone unworthy, well, that's the way cookie crumbles.

      Sounds a lot like taxes. It is abundantly clear that Paul's message is that it's only bad when he is the one who suffers.

    255. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfish · · Score: 1

      Hello Fine Sir,

      My name is Ro Npaul and I am really big in India. I have more fans than you do so kindly hand over your domain name to me immediately.

      Best Wishes,
      Ro Npaul

    256. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      While insurance functions the same way as a Ponzi scheme, insurance does not claim to be like a savings account, retirement plan, or investment. People don't pay into an insurance plan expecting it to pay out. People who pay into an insurance plan usually do so hoping they will not find themselves in a situation where it will pay out (and if that's not true, they are probably defrauding their insurance provider).

      On the other hand, Social Security will send you a statement claiming you have certain benefits to which you are entitled after a period of time. Any money which you will receive will be paid into the system at a later date, and does not represent assets that exist today. Note that proponents of social security will point to the social security trust fund, which is essentially money the government has borrowed from social security over the years, as an asset that exists today, even though that money will be repaid from the general fund (taxes) at a later date, and so is subject to the same uncertainties as the rest of the program.

      While Social Security certainly does not qualify as a Ponzi scheme, it is still a dangerously ill-concieved social program that destined to collapse down the road unless reforms are made in the near future.

    257. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by kaizokuace · · Score: 2

      I'm a drain! You insensitive... clog?

      --
      Balderdash!
    258. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, you're correct. In the complaint form, the very first paragraph says:

      Attached is a Complaint that has been filed against you with the World Intellectual Property
      Organization (WIPO) Arbitration and Mediation Center ( the Center) pursuant to the
      Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the Policy) approved by the Internet
      Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) on October 24, 1999, the Rules for
      Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (the Rules) approved by ICANN on
      October 30, 2009, and the WIPO Suppiemental Rules for Uniform Domain Name Dispute
      Resolution Policy (the Supplemental Rules).

    259. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      lol.. WIPO is the strongest organization to make the case and get results. It is also in the UN so in this case it is synonymous.

      You are making a mountain out of a mole hill and it isn't anything near what you are insisting. His legal team most likely filed the complaint as they are listed on the complaint and they are following ICANN procedure. Regardless of what you think they can do, regardless of what you think they should do, his legal team is going to do what they think is best and Ron Paul or anyone else would be very stupid to ignore legal advice.

      It doesn't mean what you think it means, it doesn't really even matter outside of him pissing his fans off for taking the domain from them.

    260. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by meglon · · Score: 1

      This is where I point out that Social Security is not Welfare unless it is, for the purposes of Democrats who want to call Libertarians names.

      ....or the purpose of republicans, and apparently libertarians (republicans too embarrassed to admit they voted for Bush... twice) to denigrate EVERYONE that's not making a million or so a year. I understand conservatives can't learn anything from the past, but it's been less than 6 months since Mitt's "47%" bullshit... that 47% being largely, the elderly, and people on social security and disability, who by tend to be more republican than democrat (red states have a higher percentage of people in that 47% then blue states do).

      Lets face it, the perfect "libertarian" utopia would look a lot like Somalia. Libertarians today are simply people who no longer want to live up to ANY responsibilities that people have always had to their society, even though they've gained all the benefits every single day of their life.

      --
      Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
    261. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      Not in the least. Libertarians are much too practical to believe that a perfect utopia is even possible. We know that we have certain responsibilities to ourselves and other members of the society in which we live, and we would simply like to have the liberty to address those responsibilities in our own ways.

      There is a place for limited government. The current government has far exceeded those limits. Just because we want to constrain government within strict limits does not mean that we wish to abolish it altogether.

      Besides, a free people with the freedom to use their own resources is far better at distributing wealth than any command economy ever was or could possibly be.

    262. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 1

      lol.. WIPO is the strongest organization to make the case and get results. It is also in the UN so in this case it is synonymous.

      Which circles again back to the point of pandering to one's own self-interest over one's principles. Yea, sometimes principles don't "get results".

      You are making a mountain out of a mole hill and it isn't anything near what you are insisting. His legal team most likely filed the complaint as they are listed on the complaint and they are following ICANN procedure.

      Good to know his legal team just does whatever it likes without consulting Ron Paul. I guess if his legal team had a good case for suing some orphans, they'd just jump on it. And even if one believes they would, it would certainly be within Ron Paul's power to stop his legal team and to chastise them for doing things he does not wish to happen. As for "following ICANN procedure", I don't see why he wouldn't just try suing Verisign for trademark infringement to obtain control over ronpaul.com instead of some obtuse procedure that's really irrelevant since it's Verisign, not ICANN, who maintains the .com servers.

      Regardless of what you think they can do, regardless of what you think they should do, his legal team is going to do what they think is best and Ron Paul or anyone else would be very stupid to ignore legal advice.

      Again, with the orphans. Just because you have grounds to sue, doesn't mean you should. Just because you can use the federal court system, doesn't mean you should. If you believe that something is wrong, you shouldn't follow through; you shouldn't just blindly follow whatever legal advice your lawyer gives you.

      It doesn't mean what you think it means, it doesn't really even matter outside of him pissing his fans off for taking the domain from them.

      Given he's retiring, you're right. It's the perfect time to ring clear his true colors because he's not up for reelection. Of course, I'm sure there's plenty of people who were voting in Ron Paul because he was an (R) or because of all the nice earmarks he swung their way, so even then, it probably didn't matter a lot. I guess one could even say it doesn't matter much for libertarianism because clearly Ron Paul seeking to dethrone himself doesn't inherently tarnish the name even if he's one of the most well-known spokesmen for the cause--which is quite a blow for the Libertarian Party.

      In many ways, you're right, it's a mountain out of a mole hill. It's just money. It's just bits in a record in a computer somewhere. It's just one person who says one thing and does another. It happens all the time. No one really gets hurt. Nothing really important changes.

      I guess, in the end, that may be the real truth of it. Ron Paul is no mountain. He's more of a mole hill.

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    263. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Well to me as a geek I prefer following logic whenever possible and it is simply logical that if you are forced by the state to pay X then you should be perfectly fine to accept that money back up to X, as you are just getting back what was taken from you.

      What i have a problem with is those who have a "do as i say not as i do" attitude and who accept dole from that very system they railed against. after others have pointed out 2 out of the 3 founding women of libertarianism actually walked the walk and did their best to avoid the system altogether, one even quitting a job rather than be forced to pay in to social security. the one who didn't practice what she preached was ironically Rand herself as she took much more from the state for her cancer treatments than she paid in to protect her fortune.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    264. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yawn. Bla Bla BLah.

      Are you a Ron Paul fan who is all butt hurt by this move or something? It means nothing- it's just the way things are done. I would be more concerned about him taking the domains by force then anything but I don't really care.

      You are making a mountain out of a mole hill, Ron Paul was unelectable outside his district, he is a distraction. Hell, he's even got you all worked up posting everything possible to smear him instead of doing something productive.

    265. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Khyber · · Score: 1

      I have no axe to grind against Paul. I have an axe to grind against all scumbag politicians and their supporters.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    266. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have never seen any proof that she accepted Social Security or Medicare under her own name or as Ann O'Connor.

      Also, if she did AND at any point in her life she paid taxes then I wouldn't consider this to be hypocrisy at all. See, Medicare and Social Security aren't "government benefits" or "government handouts" they're actually benefits/handouts from the communal purse of the tax paying public. Therefore, if Rand paid (for arguement sake) $500,000 in tax during her lifetime and accepted $250,000 in benefits then she's actually just gotten her own money back.

      I'm an Objectivist and in a perfect Objectivist world I would refuse government handouts of any kind because in a perfect Objectivist world I wouldn't be paying tax, but in today's world where Australia (my home country) is a socialist leaning semi-free market I do accept whatever benefit I can get (which is almost nothing) because on the balance of things I pay more tax than I consume in services. I don't feel hypocritical about this, I feel angry that I'm paying $1 and getting 10 cents value.

    267. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Spazmania · · Score: 1

      What's the old saw? A state-run lottery ain't nothing but a voluntary tax? You played. You lost. Move on.

      --
      Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    268. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Whether you define the market where that value is traded as "free" is irrelevant.

      It's not irrelevant at all. Ron Paul seems to be a big fan of free markets - this is not a free market. He never told people that they shouldn't work with regulators where they exist - just that there should be fewer regulators.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    269. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Archer87 · · Score: 1

      You know, if the government made me pay for a benefit, then I'm damn well going to use it. That doesn't mean that I think it should exist, but while it does and they are taking my money, I don't see what the issue is. Particularly since that benefit makes me pay them in lieu of what I might put aside for my own retirement.

      Thats exactly how I feel about it too. Paying in to Medicare (the Australian kind - like the other 6.5 billion people on Earth I'm not American) or Private Health Insurance should not be mandatory, but if I am forced to pay for it (or anything else) I will certainly take what I can get, even though I disagree with the government providing the service at all.

    270. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Archer87 · · Score: 1

      So that's fine, use it. And keep complaining about said benefits existence, it's a valid argument. But by taking those benefits, you can no longer argue that those who do take advantage of said benefits are a drain on our society without being a drain yourself.

      No thats not true at all.

      The government has no "benefits" at all that it can give, the government has only that which it takes from the people through taxation. Medicare, Social Security etc are things which the government forces you to pay for but which doesn't assure you that you'll be able to access it at all. By taking the benefits all you do is take back the tax dollars you've already spent.

      Imagine if McDonalds forced everybody to pay them $10 a day, but in exchange there was a conditional promise of food. The store manager decides who gets what, so some people get a 50 cent ice cream cone, and some people get three Big Mac Meals (>$10 value). Does that seem fair? no, of course it isn't fair. FAIR is that YOU get what YOU pay for, which is what you get from a Free Market system. Socialist systems have a Robin Hood style attitude - they rob from the rich in order to give to the poor, but thats absurd, because:
      a) the rich didn't make the poor become poor. b) the rich *use less* of the government's services (for example, a rich person won't be using public health care, they'll have their own insurance, and they may not be sending their kids to public school).
      c) the rich aren't responsible for anybody but themself (and conversely, the poor aren't responsible for anybody but themself). "I am not my brother's keeper" as they say.

      There will always be a divide in our society based on income - some people will be born with a gift of intelligence, or a tenacity that helps them succeed, some will be lucky, some will be born in to wealth etc. That isn't a bad thing. We the wealthy need to stop feeling guilty for what we have and say ENOUGH IS ENOUGH with socialism and the welfare state. Unfortunately welfare consumers out number those who aren't, and as a result in a democracy the wealthy actually carry less power to influence decision making in this area.

    271. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if she paid into those programs (as everyone is FORCED to do), how is it hypocrisy?

    272. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you sound like the blind fanatic, bub.

    273. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by detritus. · · Score: 1

      OK, so your philosophical belief system is altruism, that man exists solely to serve others.
      But does man have the right to exist if he does not wish to serve others? Should he be jailed, enslaved, robbed, tortured, killed? Because that's exactly what happens in communism. Does man have the right to exist for his own sake, or not?

    274. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Raenex · · Score: 1

      He settled for a pittance and gave up the name. I'd hardly call that winning. Yeah, it was more than $10, but come on.

    275. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by miroku000 · · Score: 1

      I don't get it, are you saying his name is not his?

      There is a difference between having a name and having a trademark on that name. Say Henry Ford's son had started his own car company. Should he be able to cal it "Ford Car Co"? No, because his father owned the trademark for "Ford Motors" and "Ford Car Co" is confusingly similar. In Ron Paul's case, he may be able to go with a "Right of Publicity" (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personality_rights) argument if the people who own the site are making a profit off of the site by selling Ron Paul T-shirts or something. But, unless he has a tradmark on "Ron Paul- wacko liberatarian guy" or something, he should not be able to take the domain from them.

    276. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by aurum42 · · Score: 1
      Not certain if the fact that Ayn Rand was a devoted admirer of serial killer William Hickman falls into the "hypocrisy" or "logical outcome" category, but it's quite disturbing either way. Benefiting from SS/Medicare after terming those who do "parasites" is barely worth a footnote in comparison. Read all about it here: http://bit.ly/X4hpUe http://bit.ly/12I8mz3 Excerpt:

      The best way to get to the bottom of Ayn Rand's beliefs is to take a look at how she developed the superhero of her novel, Atlas Shrugged , John Galt. Back in the late 1920s, as Ayn Rand was working out her philosophy, she became enthralled by a real-life American serial killer, William Edward Hickman, whose gruesome, sadistic dismemberment of 12-year-old girl named Marion Parker in 1927 shocked the nation. Rand filled her early notebooks with worshipful praise of Hickman. According to biographer Jennifer Burns, author of Goddess of the Market , Rand was so smitten with Hickman that she modeled her first literary creation -- Danny Renahan, the protagonist of her unfinished first novel, The Little Street -- on him.

      What did Rand admire so much about Hickman? His sociopathic qualities: "Other people do not exist for him, and he does not see why they should," she wrote, gushing that Hickman had "no regard whatsoever for all that society holds sacred, and with a consciousness all his own. He has the true, innate psychology of a Superman. He can never realize and feel 'other people.'"

      This echoes almost word for word Rand's later description of her character Howard Roark, the hero of her novel The Fountainhead : "He was born without the ability to consider others." (The Fountainhead is Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas' favorite book -- he even requires his clerks to read it.)

      --
      "The slave who knows his master's will and does not get ready...will be be beaten with many blows."Luke 12:47-48
    277. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      So if I'm forced to participate in Social Security by paying payroll taxes, why is it hypocritical to accept the benefits of that participation?

      Because if you were a Randian super(wo)man you should be above polluting yourself by mixing with the sheeple?

      Except that the whole point of your accepting social security proves that you also need that money just as much as the feckless workshy untermenschen you have been condemning for their weakness.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    278. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Social Security was never supposed to be a personal savings or investment plan. It's a safety net for the benefit of society as a whole. I suppose in the US it had initially to be presented otherwise to avoid the criticism of it being socialist, which of course it is.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    279. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I don't know much about her - trivia about mediocre authors isn't high on my list of things to learn

      "Mediocre" is being flattering. Irrespective of your opinion of her philosophy, she is one of the worst writers I have ever had to plough through

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    280. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      To be fair, Social Security is pretty indistinguishable from a Ponzi scheme.

      Only if you don't know how either Social Security or Ponzi schemes work.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    281. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      By your definition any taxation which doesn't involve me paying money directly out of my bank account into a specified fund for a specified purpose is a fucking Ponzi scheme then.

      I suppose somehow you'll have to add up the military's weekly payroll bill and just deduct that exact amount from the total of everyone's tax paid each week too. Same with health, roads or anything else you pay out of taxes.

      You're just showing that you are a libertarian, which is fine if you're honest about it: just admit that you don't want to pay any taxes, and argue from there.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    282. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      I don't believe your anecdote.

      I know that in the UK actors belonging to Equity (i.e. anyone who wants to do paid work) have to change their names to avoid confusion with other actors, but that wouldn't apply to musicians or authors.

      For instance, there are two writers called David Mitchell currently publishing in the UK (one is the author of "Cloud Atlas", the other is the comedian/broadcaster).

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    283. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I don't get it, are you saying his name is not his?

      Names are not things. They are pointers to things. Ron Paul's body is his, his name is just a succession of sounds that happpen to represent him, just as they represent anyone else with the name "Ron Paul".

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    284. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I'm not a lawyer, but the trademark law might disagree with you here.

      Is "Ron Paul" a registered trademark then?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    285. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So all insurance is a Ponzi scheme, got it.

      Now, would you rather make all insurance illegal, or are you actually in favor of Ponzi schemes?

      You need to go to school and get an education. Social security is a risk reduction system. Its purpose is to avoid collapse of families because of unforeseen events such as sickness.

      In the same manner as other insurance systems make it possible to take on greater risks, social security makes it possible for people to take on more risks and be more productive.

    286. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would initially call this cybersquatting, but you made a very convincing argument there.

      Congratulations!

    287. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "You still don't understand what you're dealing with, do you? A perfect organism. Its structural perfection is matched only by its hostility... I admire its purity; a survivor, unclouded by conscience, remorse, or delusions of morality.

      "I can't lie to you about your chances, but... you have my sympathies." :)

    288. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look at the LA cop thing in California in which the have shot up 3 separate scenes and wounded several completely innocent people trying to execute a criminal instead of arresting him and going to court for justice.

      That's why I think they should use drone strikes to go after domestic terrorists. Land troops (LAPD) are just too prone to excesses and war crimes.

    289. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by stdarg · · Score: 2

      You're completely wrong, Ayn Rand said this:

      Since there is no such thing as the right of some men to vote away the rights of others, and no such thing as the right of the government to seize the property of some men for the unearned benefit of others—the advocates and supporters of the welfare state are morally guilty of robbing their opponents, and the fact that the robbery is legalized makes it morally worse, not better. The victims do not have to add self-inflicted martyrdom to the injury done to them by others; they do not have to let the looters profit doubly, by letting them distribute the money exclusively to the parasites who clamored for it. Whenever the welfare-state laws offer them some small restitution, the victims should take it . . . .

    290. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And on the libertarian hand we have the leaders calling for the dissolution of the very institutions they exploit for gain. That's what makes them hypocrites: "do as I say, not as I do" Trust them if you wish, call me a seething hater, but it's the truth.

    291. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      If I beat you up for your lunch money, and then offered to give it back to you, would you go without lunch despite the fact that you are of the belief that you shouldn't have your lunch money taken away in the first place? Hardly

      If you started an entire movement devoted to the hatred and shunning of bullies, and one of them offers to treat you to lunch using their ill-gotten spoils, you can go to lunch if you want, but it definitely looks bad from the outside.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    292. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by stdarg · · Score: 1

      How does paying a tax for the military imply that you'll get more money back later? Did you even read the definition you're criticizing?

      Paying for stuff like roads, health, and the military is not a Ponzi scheme because you're getting some kind of non-money thing for the money. Paying for stuff like welfare isn't a Ponzi scheme, because going into it you know it's charity for other people, not an investment of any kind that will be returned to you.

    293. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      When they've termed people who claim welfare "parasites" all their life, it's a deliciously amusing hypocrisy.

      Also amusing is that she ended up poor enough to be able to claim social security. Both because to her the only heroic people in the world are the rich, and because it shows the outcome of either her belief set, or what she practiced contrary to her beliefs. Poverty.

    294. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      You know, if the government made me pay for a benefit, then I'm damn well going to use it.

      But of course you won't be able to claim social security unless you're poor. And that's the point: Rand wasn't choosing to claim social security, as part of her philosophy. She was claiming it because she was on skid row. A lifetime of acting in her own rational self interest had her suffering from poverty.

      And if it was such a good example of her beliefs, why did she hide it rather than broadcast it?

    295. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      If I beat you up for your lunch money, and then offered to give it back to you, would you go without lunch despite the fact that you are of the belief that you shouldn't have your lunch money taken away in the first place? Hardly.

      For sure I would refuse it. Because I wouldn't want to let you off the hook with the principle of the school, when you got punished for stealing my lunch money. You see, it's a false analogy: Stealing, unlike tax, is a crime.

      Of all the things to beat up Ayn Rand about, it seems like people like to flock to the weakest criticism just so they can use the word "hypocrisy".

      That's because the subject of the story is the hypocrisy of another libertarian. There is indeed vast numbers of things to beat Ayn Rand up about, and criticising objectivism is like shooting fish in a barrel. But it's her hypocrisy that is pertinent here.

    296. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I have a great deal of difficulty keeping my mouth shut when people start using "proof by hypocrisy".

      Proof? The only person who's using the word proof here is you. Pointing out a hypocrisy is valuable, whether or not it proves anything. For example when you're bible bashing preacher denounces gays, then it turns out that he's been having secret affairs with men all along, that is well worth pointing out the hypocrisy. It may say nothing about gays or the bible - but it does mean that the preacher himself is a worthless sack of shit.

    297. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Your point is well taken, but even in the specific case of showing whether something is a reasonable path to take, the founder's ability to follow their own path still reduces to an anecdote.

      It was put forward as an anecdote. Nothing further was claimed.

      That is why specific hypocrisy is not useful in these discussions.

      What discussions? The only relevance to the story was another example of a libertarian hypocrite.

    298. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      So where do people who choose to sit at home and write novels fit? When that activity leaves them so poor they have to claim social security?

      I mean, Rand could have chosen to be one of those industrial executives she admired so much, and presumably earned a huge salary. But she chose a path that led her impoverished and claiming welfare instead. Presumably because she considered it in her rational self-interest.

    299. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      You are forced to participate, and only an idiot would not seek to regain the money they were forced to hand over to Social Security.

      You say it like it's a free choice to claim social security. Of course it's not. You have to be poor enough. By claiming social security she proved she needed it. And there's the end of her philosophy - a lifetime of Objectivism; of acting in her "rational self-interest" left her impoverished.

    300. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Now explain "Ann".

    301. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Does man have the right to exist for his own sake, or not?

      There's not a libertarian in the world that even tries to. They all use the roads that the government put there for example. And shelter in the relative peace that military and constabulary give him.

      Libertarianism is just a big word for selfishness. It means: I'll take what I can get, but I'll resent giving anything back.

    302. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      It's a repudiation of her beliefs that she needed to. In the end even the great objectivist had to get support from the government.

    303. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by PoolOfThought · · Score: 1

      Let's remove Rand from the conversation just for your first question. We'll bring her back at the end... I just really can't tell if the second statement was part of the first or kind of a "follow up" and I don't think including her actually adds any value to the first question anyway.

      If someone is one that "chooses to sit at home and write novels" without being one hell of a writer AND one hell of a marketer then that same individual is likely choosing to live a lifestyle congruent with very little income. There is nothing preventing them from getting a j-o-b that actually supports them and writing in their off hours. If they want to live the romantic existence of the starving artist then that's fine, but they should be prepared to do so when that make that choice. I have an uncle who is a great classical guitarist - he did the starving artist thing for years when he was younger. That was the cool thing to do and he just enjoyed the chase. He now has a postgraduate degree in mathematics and works for a well known aerospace company. He still plays guitar and he's recently been laying down tracks in the studio in preparation for his first CD. He's an anecdote, but he's also proof that one can both follow do their own thing while also being a non-drag on their fellow humans.

      Now, if the person is 65 and older and wants to sit at home and write bad novels for which they never get paid, draw Social Security, be on medicaid, etc then go for it. They've likely put into the system the whole time. I don't have a problem with that. If a kid loses a parent then I have no problem with surviving other parent, even if they don't NEED it, taking the checks the social security sends to surviving spouses with children. That's who it was MEANT for - not for those simply stuck in a "what can the government give me today" mindset.

      Now, I'm no expert on Rand. But it is my understanding that her estate was not that of a pauper. She did draw from programs as she aged, but these are the same programs that she paid in to and there's simply no reason for any rational person who wants what's best for them (Rand's ongoing theme) to turn down "free" money. She drew from these programs BY CHOICE. She paid into them. She didn't like it. She wished they didn't exist. She took her money back over time by following the rules. She still thought the rules were bad and wrong. She probably wished she didn't even have the option to receive the checks. But, as I (basically) said in the comment you responded to... you can play by the rules as long as they are the rules... the whole while trying to change them.

      And by the way, the right way to change the rules isn't to not take the money you've paid in over your life. That's just stupid. The right way (other than the ballot and other boxes) is to not pay into them to start with. That also comes with a price and each individual has to choose which price they're willing to pay.

      --
      My present is the activity I am currently engaged in with the purpose of turning the future into a better past.
    304. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      They still mail yearly "statements" to show "your" personal benefits to keep up the propaganda.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    305. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Like I said, I don't claim to be a lawyer - but my understanding is that people do have similar (though perhaps weaker) claims to their names as trademarks. If not, then perhaps they should be (and if several guys have the same name and get a conflict, then it's resolved on a first-come basis).

    306. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Posting anonymously so as not to undo moderation.

      That did not work so well for Mike Rowe.

    307. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by wallsg · · Score: 1

      I'm not a Ron Paul advocate (even though he's right in some areas), but is it hypocrisy to use the system in place to right what you believe to be a wrong, even if you would prefer and are working toward a different system?

      If someone had a reason unrelated to Ron Paul the Politician and Public Figure to register the name RonPaul.com then there would be no question that they owned it. Ron Paul's followers, who are supposedly (I've never visited it so I'm assuming) using RonPaul.com to spread the ideas of Ron Paul, get what would appear to be his official endorsement by the use of his name. This is definitely not unrelated to Ron Paul as they are implying that they are speaking for him. If there were a third-party AlGore.com that purported to explain the philosophy of Al Gore the politician and activist. I'm sure that Al Gore would have issues with that.

      What I don't understand is why he didn't exert ownership over the site the first time he heard of it, unless it was to keep it independent so that he wasn't responsible for what was said there. Perhaps now that he's retired he wants to use the site as his mouthpiece, but he never should have implicitly approved of them by letting them operate for so long.

      I just found that my vanity website (basically a bookmark page I've had for several years) shares the name of a preacher. If I were to use the website to start "speaking for him" there might be some issues with that.

      All just my opinion.

    308. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, purchasing a well-known person's name as a domain name and then representing that person (to remove all doubt that it was that exact instance of the name) should be considered a form of cybersquatting, just as it is to buy a domain of a well-known company and try to sell it to the company.

    309. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your comment is partially false. I will let you research it yourself (easy these days) to find out which part, and more importantly, why it was not hypocritical to take what one paid in.

    310. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by SolitaryMan · · Score: 1

      Well, to be fair, this is an excellent way to lower the market value of that website :)

      --
      May Peace Prevail On Earth
    311. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Common sense tells me that a person filled with hatred and disgust is never to be trusted, no matter what that person stands for, no matter how righteous his plans are, no matter how loud he yells. I know this from life experience.

      The libertarians as a whole seem to be polite, respectful, and honest people. The anti-libertarians are the polar opposite: rude, disrespectful, and deceitful. This isn't a rule set in stone, just an observation by an independent third party who understands human psychology. When a person puts that amount of personal effort into silencing a tiny fringe group that poses absolutely no threat to him, it would be foolish not to question his motive.

      Hate away, my friend -- it has a funny way of making things very clear.

    312. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      No one may be using the word, but that doesn't mean that it isn't appropriate for describing how instances of hypocrisy are actually being used in arguments.

      And yes, hypocrisy is valid when discussing whether some person is a role model, but frequently battles about, for instance, Christian teachings on homosexuality can find themselves centering on the person making the assertion, rather than the idea itself.

      Religious figures, in particular, are going to be particularly susceptible to accusations of hypocrisy because they are asserting a revealed doctrine that, in many cases, humans are already asserted to not be able achieve in full, but rather to aspire to. The fact that a preacher who preaches against gays is himself an active homosexual doesn't sound like a healthy situation, but in respect to maintaining "heavenly" law, everyone is going to be found wanting. In that event, *anyone* who preaches is eventually going to be some sort of hypocrite, the only difference is going to be in the degree that they are found wanting.

      Some people's solution to not seeming a hypocrite is to express no opinion that they may not be able to follow themselves. And I assert, this is one of the worst problems with those who put such stock in hypocrisy in arguments. As it has been said, we move forward when our reach exceeds our grasp. If we do not risk overreaching, we fail to make progress. In becoming overly concerned with consistency in these situations, over the actual proposition, we lose any value in either affirming or refuting the issue at the root.

      I can easily imagine a goal that may be important, that at the same time, is difficult to achieve. As I said previously, no one is going to argue that peace is undesirable, but if you find yourself reacting to some situation in a less than pacific way, does it make you a "piece of shit" for failing to be peaceful? You probably regard the value of peace as higher than say, gay bashing, but unless the preacher is truly insincere, his hypocrisy is not even really more than an exposition of his ability to fail at doing something he finds difficult to resist. We move ahead by looking at what he says, and not what he does. If you refute that the Bible, or simple human decency, requires that gays be bashed with actual arguments, you not only defuse that one person, you refute the whole concept. If you refute one person, the idea can stand with someone else who, frankly, may be much less hypocritical, but even more dangerous because they may be wrong, but are still convincing.

      So, in the end, I'd prefer to discuss things like Objectivism, or homosexuality for that matter, based on logical points separated from the personalities suggesting them. We can all agree that hypocrisy, may be "probable cause" to suggest problems, but it shouldn't be a substitute for actual deliberation of the merits, or lack of merit, of a proposition.

    313. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has nothing to do with Senator Paul; you have confused Ron Paul's son with this effort.

      Although I do agree with your assessment that this is an obvious case of "do as I say, not as I do" hypocrisy that normally emanates from the left wing progressives.

    314. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you have evidence that Ayn Rand did not pay into the Social Security program?

    315. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Patch86 · · Score: 1

      Did you click on the two links I posted? They are per-citizen rather than per-household, but the principal should hold:
      - USA spent $11,041 per citizen in 2010.
      - The G20 average for 2010 was $16,110 per citizen.
      - Norway spent the most per citizen, at $40,908.
      - Of the G20, the countries which spent less per citizen than the US were South Korea ($4,557), Brazil ($2,813), Russia ($2,458), China ($1,010), and India ($226), several of which still experience crushing poverty.

      So, to answer your question, yes- I can name many countries which spend more per household than the US.

    316. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yes, hypocrisy is valid when discussing whether some person is a role model, but frequently battles about, for instance, Christian teachings on homosexuality can find themselves centering on the person making the assertion, rather than the idea itself.

      Poetic justice I say. Character assassinations is a perfect counter to appealing to authority figures, which supporters of an idea are just as likely (if not more likely) to do

      In Ron Paul's case, he was often praised for his consistency, how he's a successful doctor, how he holds firm to his beliefs ("Dr No") unlike all those other guys. The actual ideas themselves are rarely contested - trying to do so could get you labeled as being crazy, have no understanding of economics, or worse

      Next, you argued that nobody's perfect, and if we don't take risk, we can't progress. That sounds nice, but... that's it. It's just a nice sounding platitude, but it has little practical value. You can apply that to almost anything and pardon any sort of hypocrisy.

      As you said later, one may look at the speaker's sincerity. However, this implies you CANNOT rely on the good sounding platitude above, and judge things on a case by case basis.

      So just how sincere was/is Ron Paul, or Ayn Rand, or libertarians in general (at least the ones people talk about on slashdot)? From the reactions I see (I think there's someone pointing out - with links - how Paul helped proposed spending bills and then vote against them, to make himself look good), I would say they are not that sincere.

    317. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Profit from the goodwill"

      So, I guess Ronpaul.com doesn't make any money on all the swag they sell in the store they run. Now they are trying to sell it ot RP.

    318. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It isn't hypocrisy to reclaim your own money back in this way. If anything, you aren't getting the interest from it in the payout the government gets from it. They took it, used it, and unless you do, you will never see it again.

    319. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try using some of that context,

      domain name with bad faith intent to profit from the goodwill of a trademark belonging to someone else.

      Where was the bad faith required here?

    320. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by stenvar · · Score: 1

      But by taking those benefits, you can no longer argue that those who do take advantage of said benefits are a drain on our society without being a drain yourself.

      Of course you can consistently argue that. First of all, the benefits can be "a drain" in the sense that, even though they are full paid for by the people receiving them, it would have been economically better for the country if they had been provided in some other way. Another sense in which some people taking advantage of benefits can be "a drain" while others need not be is if some people get a below market rate deal while others pay more than market rate.

    321. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by morethanthesky · · Score: 1

      >>they have a very unique piece of property property that doesn't belong to them. More than the domain name... the valuable thing is the data. I gave my name, my address, my email address and my money **to** Ron Paul. I did not give those items to anyone else. For them to take what I gave to Dr. Paul and try to sell it is stealing. Simple. Further, if you develop a product while under the employ of someone or company, for the purpose of promoting that someone or company, using that someone or company's resources, then try to patent it under your own name, the patent office would throw it out because that code/data/whatever is the property of that someone or company for whom you are working (volunteer or not). If you start to say that I own all the data that I am responsible for as webmaster is my property and I can take it with me even though it was collected from citizens under the name of my company I would be thrown in jail, which is what should be done to these extortionists. In summary, my gift was to Ron Paul. It belongs to him.

    322. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by stenvar · · Score: 1

      I am forced to partake in Obamacare and social security; "partaking" means primarily paying for an inefficient service. There is nothing whatsoever inconsistent about taking advantage of the (poor) service that I have already been forced to pay for. Demanding that I don't use services I was forced to pay for is totally unreasonable, and it's a sleazy debate tactic by people trying to defend imposition of costly and inefficient government services. By analogy, the same is true for UN, WTO, patents, and copyrights: people "pay for" the existence of those organizations and restrictions (because they are subject to them), so they can take advantage of them while still arguing against them without being inconsistent.

      One of the clearest example of that is the GNU GPL, which uses copyright and licenses to undermine the current system of copyrights and licenses.

    323. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by stenvar · · Score: 1

      People arguing against social security are saying: "I want to take this money and invest it myself because I'm getting a bad deal from the government". That is what "doing without social security" means. But after I'm forced to pay for social security, the money is gone; I can't use it to do what I argue people should do instead of social security, namely invest it in safer and better assets.

    324. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by stenvar · · Score: 1

      Let's say you rob me at gunpoint and take my money and I say "what you are doing is wrong". Later, you come back and offer to give me back 50% of what you stole. Am I a hypocrite for taking back that money? Of course not. The fact that you give me some of my money back doesn't change the fact that you're a robber, and it doesn't obligate me to stop calling you a robber.

      Well, that's roughly how Social Security and Medicare work. I myself certainly intend to take every penny I can get out of them. The government may force me to take a lousy deal, but at least I want the maximum back that I can get. That doesn't change the fact that it is "robbery". Your mistake is in thinking of it as a "gift" or "benefit".

    325. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by ibsteve2u · · Score: 1

      True; it is pointless to argue with the followers of Ayn Rand as the way the mass of them interpret and apply Ayn Rand's philosophy is "I'm in it for me and screw [you]!" (albeit "rational self-interest sounds better) where the set "you" contains an individual, a community, a state, a country, all the nations of the world, or the entire human race - whichever is more personally rewarding for the Rand devotee.

      That is how they can justify everything from taking government handouts to poisoning you with pollution in an effort to increase their margins to insisting that those who take government handouts are leeches to those who pollute their own air should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law; their entire universe encompasses "Me!" and no more.

      On the flip side, if they use terms like "patriotism", "responsibility", or "loyalty", you can either try to figure out how they're going to benefit from your/the community's/the state's/the nation's compliance with the intended behavior associated with those terms or just start laughing.

      --
      Orwell: "In a Time of Universal Deceit, telling the Truth is a Revolutionary Act"
    326. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Gen_Music · · Score: 1

      By that definition Business, Government... hell Capitalism et. all is a Ponzi Scheme, but substitute money for value seeing as not all things are served as liquidity.

    327. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by uninformedLuddite · · Score: 1

      > She said more than that one line, right?

      (Looks at 1000+ page doorstop that is Atlas Shrugged.)

      A better use could not be found.

      --
      The new right fascists are bilingual. They speak English and Bullshit.
    328. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Because that's not what she believed, nor what the American right-wing Objectivists believe."

      Idiot. Let me make this very simple for you.

      Socialism is theft, the state steals as much productivity of the people as they can and for this theft they pay a pittance in "benefits" back to the people. Conservatives believe the people are better able to manage their money and should not have it stolen from them in the first place. We call for reduced government spending and reduced tax rates.

      But the truth is that the state steals a huge percentage of what you produce; and for that you get a "benefit", you don't get back what you put in, but you do get some of it.

      I would far prefer to not have my money stolen from me and forgo any state "benefit". But that is not the case, the money is taken before I even see it paid to me. You are damn right that when I am able I am claiming any damn "benefit" the state owes me, I fucking paid for it in the first place, as did Ayn Rand.

      So there is no hypocrisy. It would be hypocritical if she was a drain on society, produced nothing of value and then took state benefits after advocating people pay their own way; this is not what happened by any stretch of the imagination. Rand may not have been right about everything, but when she was right she got it better than just about anyone ever has, and this was not one of the cases where she was wrong.

    329. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Gen_Music · · Score: 1

      So all you're saying there would be a Plan B for Ron Paul to attempt to get the website without paying for it like everyone else. That doesn't make sense. It's like saying Libertarianism is okay because if there was no Social Security then there would be some other kind of welfare tax system... errr... excuse me but Ron Paul was arguing against the principle not the entity in that case and was doing the same here. The UN would still do the same things if it was called the PINATA and anything that replaces it and it's systems just becomes a subset of it.

      If your problem is not with it's rules then your problem is with it's conduct and that requires correction, not destruction.

    330. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      You say it like it's a free choice to claim social security. Of course it's not. You have to be poor enough.

      Umm, no -- you might be thinking of Welfare. Social Security can be claimed by anyone at the proper retirement age, even Bill Gates. It's one of the things Republicans want to reform about it actually (means testing).

    331. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have to be poor to collect Social Security in the United States. You can collect it if you are old enough and you've paid into it (i.e. had a job where the tax was withheld) for at least a few years. Few jobs are exempt from social security. The 'self-employed' even have to pay in, which I'm guessing was Ayn Rand's situation.

      Furthermore, the Social Security monthly benefit is roughly proportional to what you've paid in, to a point (see: bend points). The thing is, Congress can theoretically change the tax rate and the benefit formula at any time. The tax rate has been raised several times. Not sure if the benefit has ever been changed (besides for inflation).

      Also, note that the benefit is calculated based on the wages you've paid Social Security tax on, not the amount of the tax. So, the "return on investment" decreases as the tax rate goes up, if you think in those terms.

    332. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      You also just described insurance which many libertarians see as a panacea...do you consider insurance a Ponzi scheme as well?

      No, because insurance isn't promised money -- it's money "in case of emergency". If Social Security operated like insurance, less people would call it out for the fraud that it is. Though maybe not a Ponzi scheme, it is most certainly of the same family (Pyramid scheme, Matrix scheme, what-have-you). There is a great deal of supporting evidence for this:

      1) Early adopters are getting way more out of it than they put in
      2) Late adopters will likely get way less out of it than they put in
      3) Prolonged shrinking of the US labor force (such as from negative population growth) would make the whole house of cards fall down -- we're already seeing a great deal of blowback just from the employment contraction of the recent recession, as well as from the Baby Boomer effect

      None of the above facts are true of an insurance system.

    333. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Bingo! We have a winner! I have set and argued with some of the big wigs of libertarianism on the web like the one that runs freedomainradio, Stephen something or other, and at the end of the day it ALL comes down to greed, no way they can paint it any different. It was libertarians that shouted "Let him die!" when Ron Paul was given the question of the 22 year old without insurance,it is libertarians that are taking every possible tax dodge they can rather than share a single cent, hell I never understood why they didn't champion Mitt Romney, hell he may have talked like a liberal but he was the biggest tax dodger to ever run!

      At the end of the day I'd still take socialism or even communism over libertarianism because no matter how bad those systems may end up in practice at least they come from a "help thy neighbor" belief system whereas with libertarianism no matter how they try to spin it at the end of the day its a vicious and brutal belief system, and if it were implemented tomorrow we'd have full blown feudalism before the end of the year.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    334. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      But here is what is gonna make capitalists shit their pants, libertarians too.....capitalism, like every other ism, is doomed and MUST be destroyed, there is no other choice.

      Technology has already made most blue collar and now many white collar jobs disappear, after all nobody hires humans to calculate anything, the machines do it. Don't need humans in the factories, only a couple to push buttons as the machines work. Seen the Hondabot? Climbs stairs, can work in hazardous areas, never gets tired, never needs a break, don't need healthcare or sick leave, not ever.

      We are ALL John Henry and the true lesson is you can work yourself to death and the machine will still beat you, as it'll be able to keep right on working while they drag your corpse away. What good will be a capitalist system when only a handful at the very top and their lackeys can afford anything because they have the robots and thus the capital? we are in for a rough ride, with lots of revolutions and upheaval in the days to come, but at the end capitalism will have to be eliminated, just as communism and fascism came and went.

      A final thought to chew on: if you look at the amount of labor required to keep output at current levels you could kill half the people on this planet, line them up and shoot half of the men, women, and children tomorrow, and not only would the quality of life not go down, it would go up as those that were left would find more demand for what little labor is required to keep things at current levels. Its over friend, the rich at the top will fight it, right up to the second we put them against the wall and shoot them, but capitalism, like every other ism, is doomed, technology will render it obsolete.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    335. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently Ayn Rand wasn't an übermensch.

    336. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If she didn't think it was wrong why did she use a fake name?

    337. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and I am waiting for 19 personal email accounts to be given BACK from some f**an; for no payment of course.

    338. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by nobodie · · Score: 1

      Yes, but then a real person, a smart and honest person, stands up and says: "I was wrong, it turned out that what I was complaining about was a good thing after all." Where are Rand And Paul on this front, the place of the honest person, not the ideologue, can be lonely and make you feel a fool, but it is still honored by those who appreciate honesty.

      Anyone else want to stand up for simple honesty?

      --
      Subversion of spatial scale luxury decoration ideas.
    339. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Some people's solution to not seeming a hypocrite is to express no opinion that they may not be able to follow themselves. And I assert, this is one of the worst problems with those who put such stock in hypocrisy in arguments.

      The correct way is to be honest. It's fine to say "Ideally one should go to the gym 3 times a week. But I personally find it difficult to manage." It's not OK to say "You should always go to the gym 3 times a week", if you rarely go yourself.

      The latter are hypocrites, and it's always a good thing to call them out. The former are open and honest.

      You talk of a third group that couldn't bring themselves to say what a good gym regime is if they are not able to follow it themselves. Honest but silent. Well so what? There are enough open and honest people about. We don't need everyone to voice their opinions on gyms.

      I'm fine with discussing objectivism itself, and homosexuality. When they are on-topic. Here it wasn't. The hypocrisy of libertarians was the topic here.

      And hypocrisy is always worth pointing out. Regardless of any other discussions about the underlying issue.

    340. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Ah, OK. It has a different meaning that it does in the UK then. In the UK Social Security is a means tested benefit, and it doesn't rely on having first paid enough in.

    341. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      But surely you got fabulously rich just by being a selfish cunt, isn't that what objectivism teaches us?

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    342. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      It's hypocritical when you try to deny it to others.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    343. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      Bravo sir.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    344. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The latter are hypocrites, and it's always a good thing to call them out.

      Is there some huge benefit that I'm not seeing?

    345. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being a libertarian, he shouldn't be supporting imaginary property to begin with.

    346. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      This however is a unique piece of property.

      The imaginary kind?

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    347. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by lamer01 · · Score: 1

      Insurance is optional!

    348. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      But here is what is gonna make capitalists shit their pants, libertarians too.....capitalism, like every other ism, is doomed and MUST be destroyed, there is no other choice. Technology has already made most blue collar and now many white collar jobs disappear, after all nobody hires humans to calculate anything, the machines do it. Don't need humans in the factories, only a couple to push buttons as the machines work. Seen the Hondabot? Climbs stairs, can work in hazardous areas, never gets tired, never needs a break, don't need healthcare or sick leave, not ever

      This straw man is being trotted out way too often these days. Automation isn't producing any less jobs. Job fields come and go all the time. Here's a whole slew of them that have been obsoleted to date: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=124251060
      And there's just as many new jobs that didn't exist decades ago, such as the fast growing field of cybersecurity.

      Heck, the US practically eliminated all its manufacturing jobs and became a service economy. Markets ebb and flow, but work will always be there. I don't know why you can't see this, why you're focused only on the "jobs being lost to automation" side of the equation while ignoring all the variables on the other end (innovations, industry demand shifts, population decline, new markets such as outer space for future high-tech ventures). If you're really going to project decades down the road, at least be fair about it. Until the Singularity comes, there will always be jobs for humans. If anything, menial jobs will be eliminated and the intellectual barrier for entry into the work force will be elevated, requiring better education across the board (and that's a good thing).

    349. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by N0Man74 · · Score: 1

      This in the U.S. The author and musician were in the U.S.

      I tried to google to find the story, but I could not find a reference to it. The story was covered on a news program in-depth around 2002.

    350. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I speak out against what I consider to be excessive taxation, does that mean I don't have to pay those taxes? Does it make me a hypocrite for paying them?

      Geez! Some people come up with really stupid analogies.

      Speaking out against a benefit while you enjoy the fruits of that same benefit is NOT equivalent to speaking out against a burden that you and others shoulder and which you would like to see reduced for yourself and those others.

    351. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A quick Google search turned up this - There are 30 people in the U.S. named Ron Paul.

      So how does Ron Paul prove the site RonPaul.com is his, and not one of the other 29 Ron Pauls?

      Depending on the subjet of conversation - this guy is either a genious or insane. He never seems to be in the middle.

    352. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His name might be 'his property', but an internet domain purchase in the name of Ronpaul.com is not his property. He's going to have to buy it, like the rest of the world. If it was Johnsmith.com or Walmart.com it would be the same, the first purchaser has the right to keep as long as they wanted, and put anything (legal) on it.

    353. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Meski · · Score: 1

      Ayn Rand is a a pen name, the point of a pen name is that it is different to your everyday name that's on your drivers license, etc. She's not Anne O Connor, either. (Alisa Zinov'yevna Rosenbaum)

    354. Re:Welcome to Capitalism by Meski · · Score: 1

      Although the defining thing about Ponzi schemes is that they do collapse in the end. I guess your point here is that we just haven't yet witnessed that end for the Social Security scheme.

  2. Ron was a Rep. not a Sen. by smittyoneeach · · Score: 1

    The son is the Senator.

    --
    Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear
    1. Re:Ron was a Rep. not a Sen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Where does RuPaul fit in this family? Older brother/sister to Rand? ;)

  3. Typical Libertarian by Telecommando · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They're all for "free market" economics until it actually impacts them personally. Then suddenly they want government intervention and special treatment.

    What a hypocrite.

    --
    Beta sux! Join the Slashcott! http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=4760465&cid=46173047
    1. Re:Typical Libertarian by h4rr4r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why is this modded down?
      This is the absolute truth. He likes the free market until it impacts him. If he does not like the price he is free to not buy this product, but instead he wants some outside actor to force this person to give up their property.

      This is pretty common from what I see of libertarians.

    2. Re:Typical Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because libertarians don't like to face reality.

    3. Re:Typical Libertarian by Kidbro · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not that I'm a libertarian (far from it), but I've never really gotten the impression that they hate trademark laws. This is (arguably) a trademark case.

    4. Re:Typical Libertarian by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What I like is that they are fighting over something that is purely a creation of ICANN: there is nothing magic about DNS that makes domain names globally authoritative(and, unlike with fiat currency, it isn't even legally troublesome to make your own, if you can get anybody to accept them), ICANN just runs the nameservers that people give a damn about.

      If they wanted to take this out to the marketplace and settle it like men, they could just each provide an IP and let their respective supporters modify their hosts files or local DNS records according to their preferences, as consumers, about which ronpaul.com offered a superior ronpaul.com product and/or service.

      It's like watching two gold-bugs fighting over a $100 'federal reserve note'...

    5. Re:Typical Libertarian by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      this is why the free market does not work in practice any more than communism. Nice ideal, but people don't play nice together.

    6. Re:Typical Libertarian by LordLimecat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Its modded down because its a broad generalization that cant possibly be made honestly unless he has actually see this behavior from a statistically significant number of libertarians. Its similar to BS like "All republicans are racist" (they arent), or "all Democrats are communist" (they arent), and should be modded down as such.

    7. Re:Typical Libertarian by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      It's not a question of the free market or free market price, It's a question of property rights, which is one of the foundations of libertarianism. Libertarians also recognize the need for some sort of arbitration system to settle disputes.

      Both sides have a legitimate argument and the way to settle the dispute is through arbitration. I do think he's being a jerk by choosing the UN as the arbitrator.

      If the person had used some unique domain name and built up traffic and a mailing list, there would be no question whatsoever that it's their property to sell at fair market value.

    8. Re:Typical Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually, so far as I am aware, we've never seen a communist state. None of the experiments we've seen so far have gotten past the 'benevolent dictator' stage to a truly classless society, so we have no evidence on the practicality of communism.

    9. Re:Typical Libertarian by Sique · · Score: 1

      So we could coin a new name: "the true communism fallacy" :)

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    10. Re:Typical Libertarian by moeinvt · · Score: 1

      The only thing remotely hypocritical is that he chose the UN to arbitrate the dispute.

      There is debate among libertarians about exactly how the tort system should be implemented and torts enforced, but universal recognition that there will inevitably be disputes in a society and hence the need for some sort of arbitration system.

      This is a dispute that needs arbitration. I can see a legitimate argument on both sides.

      The "free market" does not meant that there are no rules whatsoever. No free market advocate would consider fraud, theft or murder acceptable acts for the pursuit of profit.

    11. Re:Typical Libertarian by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      How can a non-unique domain name exist?
      They have to be unique, you can't have two slashdot.org it would not work.

      Property rights here are simple, they own the property ronpaul.com. Can't get any simpler.

    12. Re:Typical Libertarian by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Grammatical nitpick: He's talking about the "typical libertarian", not all libertarians, which is a rather different generalization. "They're all for" is casual English for "[the typical libertarians] are fully in support of", not "every libertarian is in support of".

    13. Re:Typical Libertarian by Paul+Pierce · · Score: 1

      What a hypocrite

      Ron Paul is not a hypocrite for this - and I'm shocked at the lack of intelligence of Slashdot on this one.

      The site was setup to profit from his name from day one. It doesn't matter if they 'fought' for the guy. Without his name the site and merchandise had no value. This is a strong trademark - something that acquired secondary meaning but would otherwise be nondescript.

      You can try to argue that there are other Ron Paul's - which is true for the domain name, but the domain name value is all tied directly to the Ron Paul. They aren't generating sales and traffic because of Ron Paul the plummer.

      I doubt Ron Paul's views often - but anything you specifically disagree with, look deeper, normally you'll find you were misinformed or confused.

    14. Re:Typical Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its similar to BS like "All republicans are racist" (they arent), or "all Democrats are communist" (they arent),

      Arguably so, but...

      and should be modded down as such.

      No, it should be responded to as such.

    15. Re:Typical Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul is not a hypocrite for this - and I'm shocked at the lack of intelligence of Slashdot on this one.

      I'm shocked by your lack of facts. Here's one quote from Ron Paul. It took me 10 seconds to find this:

      The choice is very clear: we either follow the Constitution or submit to UN global governance. American national sovereignty cannot survive if we allow our domestic laws to be crafted by an international body. This needs to be stated publicly more often. If we continue down the UN path, America as we know it will cease to exist.

      So, by going to the UN instead of using domestic law, he's chosen to destroy America as we know it. Either he's a hypocrite or a traitor. I'm going for the first.

    16. Re:Typical Libertarian by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

      And not even regular government intervention, he has gone to the UN! Isn't he the same type of guy who says we should handle our own business ourselves, rather than trust an organization that exists to place limits on our national sovereignty? I see talk of irony, but this is more like pathetic hypocrisy than irony.

      Sorry Ron, but you are really beginning to look like just another angry, wealthy, old man. If somebody got something in a perfectly legal manner, by thinking of it first, you should either pay their price for it or fuck off, because it isn't yours. Isn't that the conservative libertarian way? Seems like he's becoming a whiny crank looking for a hand-out, claiming entitlement to something of value which other people worked for.

      And, THIS JUST IN: Ron Paul Supports Expanded Obamacare, Forced Abortions, and Hillary in 2016.

      --
      This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
    17. Re:Typical Libertarian by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Grammatical nitpick: He's talking about the "typical libertarian", not all libertarians, which is a rather different generalization.

      Most generalizations are false, including this one. -- Mark Twain

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    18. Re:Typical Libertarian by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Not that I'm a libertarian (far from it), but I've never really gotten the impression that they hate trademark laws. This is (arguably) a trademark case.

      Ron Paul is a minarchist. He believes in government, and thinks he can keep a leash on it. I thought he'd gotten over the Constitutional fetish with his parting speech before Congress, but apparently he still likes IP.

      Libertarians have legitimate debates over whether the use of trademarks are matters of Imaginary Property or measures of fraud/not-fraud.

      The problem for Ron Paul in this situation, is that there is no fraud accusation here - RonPaul.com is not trying to pretend that it's Ron Paul.

      So this is an intellectual property argument. Somebody needs to lock Ron Paul in a room with Stephan Kinsella for a few days until he's gotten over IP. IP infringes on real property rights, which is the foundation of modern libertarianism. The whole issue of the UN is a red herring (yeah, it's hypocritical, which is scandalous, but not the main issue for libertarian objection).

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    19. Re:Typical Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point!

      Unless there is any legislation that makes ICANN's DNS blessed, then this is a monopoly case.

      In that case Ron Paul must be for government intervention against monopolies to not be a hypocrite.

      I barely know who he is, so maybe someone else could enlighten me on this.

    20. Re:Typical Libertarian by Kidbro · · Score: 1

      Libertarians have legitimate debates over whether the use of trademarks are matters of Imaginary Property or measures of fraud/not-fraud.

      The problem for Ron Paul in this situation, is that there is no fraud accusation here - RonPaul.com is not trying to pretend that it's Ron Paul.

      Good point. Trademark laws are mostly useful in relation to fraud, and this is obviously not attempted fraud. Thanks for pointing that out. This may indeed be more hypocritical than I initially thought.

    21. Re:Typical Libertarian by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Thank you. I've expanded on the thought a bit here.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    22. Re:Typical Libertarian by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      The "free market" does not meant that there are no rules whatsoever.

      Which means Libertarians are no different from everyone else when pressed: because they want the "right amount" of marketplace regulation. Which is why, in end, every Libertarian is a political hack. Market regulation for my pet issues, free market for everything else.

  4. What's the big deal? by ddtmm · · Score: 0

    Sounds fair to me. IT is a .com after all.

  5. Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Redmancometh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I actually liked Ron Paul right up to the point of reading this. Anyone who preaches smaller government, less control, more personal freedom, and a truly free economy and does this...Well that person is a hypocritical 2 faced..politician.

    1. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Brett+Buck · · Score: 3, Insightful

      On the surface, Paul says a lot of things I would generally agree with. Once you dig for a while, you find a lot of stuff that is utterly loony/suicidal. The Pualbots are even more absurd.

              He loses for a reason.

    2. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Hopefully this will lead you (and other libertarians, the current fashionable ideology of the 'net) to start expanding your world view a bit. Ideologies are a good thing to know and understand, but the world is not black and white and never as simple as your high priests may claim. This applies to you too, all 3 of you remaining communists hiding in the corner over there.

    3. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Then you should have researched him more.

      He liked smaller government when it was going to advance the things he liked. That was it.

    4. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by gQuigs · · Score: 2

      > that is utterly loony/suicidal

      Name it. I find that is the most common thing said about Ron Paul. That he has crazy ideas, yet most people can' t actually name one of them. It's not saying much, but he seems to be the most sane of the republican presidential candidates, by far..

      I'll name one. Switching to the gold standard. It could have worked when he first got into congress, now there is way too much money to really make that work. It's also a bad idea, because gold is actually useful in electronics, not just as currency.

    5. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Sique · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As Alfred Adler once observed: It's easier to fight for your principles than to live according to them.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    6. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by dkleinsc · · Score: 3, Funny

      Ron Paul: How do you do, good lady? I am Ron, King of the Libertarians. Whose mansion is that?
      Woman: King of the who?
      Ron Paul: King of the Libertarians.
      Woman: Who are the Libertarians?
      Ron Paul: Well, we all are. We are all Libertarians. And I am your king.
      Woman: I didn't know we had a king. I thought we were a free republic.
      Dennis: You're fooling yourself! We're living in a dictatorship. A self-perpetuating bureaucracy in which the oppressive regulations ...
      Woman: Oh, there you go bringing regulation into it again.
      Dennis: Well, that's what it's all about! If only people would...
      Ron Paul: Please, please, good people, I am in haste. Who lives in that mansion?
      Woman: No one lives there.
      Ron Paul: Then who is your landlord?
      Woman: We don't have a landlord.
      Dennis: I told you, we're an anarcho-capitalist agricultural corporation. There's a CEO who is nominally in charge ...
      Ron Paul: Yes...
      Dennis: ...but all the decisions of that CEO have to be ratified at a special bi-annual shareholders meeting...
      Ron Paul: Yes I see...
      Dennis: ...by a simple majority in the case of purely internal affairs...
      Ron Paul: Be quiet!
      Dennis: ...but by a two thirds majority in the case of...
      Ron Paul: Be quiet! I order you to be quiet!
      Woman: Order, eh? Who does he think he is?

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    7. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Gaygirlie · · Score: 1

      I actually liked Ron Paul right up to the point of reading this. Anyone who preaches smaller government, less control, more personal freedom, and a truly free economy and does this...Well that person is a hypocritical 2 faced..politician.

      He's a politician. I mean, you've been naive if you didn't think he would do this kind of stuff. It's one thing to preach about things that don't affect him personally and a whole another thing when they do.

    8. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by moeinvt · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "He loses for a reason."

      Several reasons. Most notable of which are the banking cartel, the MIC and their MSM mouthpieces.

      What distinguishes Dr. Paul from 99% of the other politicians out there is that he wanted the government and the executive branch in particular to be LESS powerful. He recognizes and embraces the fact that human beings are flawed. You might think he has some crazy ideas, but his primary idea is that people should not be able to force their ideas on you at the point of a gun.

      The only person you are going to agree with 100% of the time is yourself. What we should all agree on is that the power of government must be minimal in case some crazy guy or evil bastard gets elected.

      Instead, we have had a steady stream of people who have accumulated more and more power, thus creating the potential for catastrophic abuse. e.g. arbitrary detention and assassination of U.S. citizens.

    9. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's also a bad idea, because gold is actually useful in electronics, not just as currency.

      That actually makes it a *better* idea, because the market will have to decide between gold-as-currency or gold-as-electronics. This will help set the value of gold, as does its general scarcity.

    10. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Vaphell · · Score: 2

      his official stance was competing currencies so you can park your purchasing power in any currency, even privately issued, and not have a government imposed penalty on that. Rationale is that monopoly breeds exploitation. You think the Fed prints too much and the inflation is massaged down? Give a vote of no confidence and opt out of dollar. It's a free market principle extended to include money as well.
      Obviously gold backed currency would be an obvious choice for many, given the long successful history of precious metals as money.

    11. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Fwipp · · Score: 1

      You might think he has some crazy ideas, but his primary idea is that people should not be able to force their ideas on you at the point of a gun.

      Exactly - I've never met a political candidate more pro-gun control than Ron Paul.

    12. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Sique · · Score: 2

      The main problem with the gold standard idea is that all the gold ever mined is not valuable enough to pay for one year's worth of world production. If you would force the world (or even the U.S.) to switch back to the gold standard, you just wouldn't have enough gold at today's prices to even pay the next month's wages. For reference, the current per capita income per month in the U.S. is close to US$2000, which at current prices ($1600/ozt) is about 1.25 ozt per month and capita in the U.S.. With more than 315 mio inhabitants, this amounts to nearly 400 mio ozt or 12,000 metric tons of gold per month necessary just to pay the U.S. wages. And there are another 6.8 billion people in the world out there not paid yet. Only 170,000 tons of gold are mined since the dawn of history.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    13. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Sique · · Score: 1

      Actually, gold backed currencies won't work anymore because of the lack of gold.
      Or to put it bluntly: There is not enough gold on this world to pay for your daily needs.
      While today, gold is only a minuscle part of world commerce, the amount of gold commerce would have to equal that of all other commerce. At current gold prices, just to pay all wages for a year in the U.S. would eat up nearly the whole gold ever mined thorough human history.
      You can just put the idea of a gold backed currency to rest. To formulate it as a paradoxon: Gold is too valuable to waste it on money.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    14. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      At current gold prices...

      nobody said the prices have to stay the same, the purchasing power of currencies would be determined by the market.
      Either way it's about choice, if you think that gold or bitcoin are better than dollars despite their drawbacks, you would be free to use them without penalties.

      Gold is too valuable to waste it on money.

      we already do that, gold mostly sits in vaults of central banks around the world and its other major use is jewelry, which is more or less equivalent to wearing banknotes (proxy for wealth/status).

    15. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      If you're "parking" money, you already have the option of a vast array of investments, including lots of different currencies and actual gold.

      I don't know that I'd really characterize the history of precious-metal-based money as "successful", just "long".

    16. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Sique · · Score: 1

      It has to sit there if we use it to back currencies. For the availability of gold, it's no difference if it is minted into coins in circulation or sitting cast in bars somewhere in a vault. And you can use gold as a currency right now - currently no important industrial country forbids the gold trade. You are free to trade gold whenever or for whatever you want. For some reason, most people think trading with gold as being to cumbersome to even bother.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    17. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny. The only people who have ever tried to force their ideas on me and mine have been libertarians and republicans.

      I follow the laws that I think make sense or are ethically reasonable (most of them). I don't bother with the others. And yet, I've never had to concern myself with these supposed "jack-booted thugs" that run our country.

      In fact, the biggest dangers I've ever faced have come from antigovernment people who called themselves libertarians and who have stolen my livestock, my propane, my gasoline, and other property, who have pointed guns at members of my family, and who have tried to fence off my property from BLM land because they didn't like the fact that I had the right to graze my animals on the land.

      I'll stick with big government rather than libertarian or republican ideas of government every day.

    18. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What we should all agree on is that the power of government must be minimal in case some crazy guy or evil bastard gets elected.

      Then can't we also agree that the power of corporations must be minimal in case some crazy guy or evil bastard becomes CEO?

    19. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      You are free to trade gold whenever or for whatever you want.

      well, not really and that's the main source of ideas of competing currencies. Two words: capital gains. Anything not government mandated is a second class citizen, because you have to pay taxes when you gain nominal dollars due to inflation (despite not gaining an ounce of real world purchasing power)

      For some reason, most people think trading with gold as being to cumbersome to even bother.

      In case of full blown gold backed currency, the only difference would be the existence of some kind of anchor, everyday money handling can be the same with both backed and fiat currencies. People in the past used paper certificates that were claims on a defined amount of gold, also there is no reason why cashless transactions can't be made in the same manner they are done now. Does it matter if bits in computer represent fiat dollars or ounces of gold?

    20. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      given the long successful history of precious metals as money.

      Except for all of the cases where they weren't successful.

    21. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by crunchygranola · · Score: 1

      All this "gold standard" stuff is a colossal bid at "rent seeking" - seeking to induce government action to manufacture wealth for oneself. If all currency were necessarily convertible to, and backed by gold, then the value of gold would rise to match the world currency holdings. And people who are promoting this government imposed rule, and investing in gold, would get very rich.

      --
      Second class citizen of the New Gilded Age
    22. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul has crazy ideas, such as not bailing out the banks, balancing the budget, and not going to war in Iraq.

    23. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The main problem with the gold standard idea is that all the gold ever mined is not valuable enough to pay for one year's worth of world production.

      Do some econ101, find out why your statement is absurd.

    24. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      If an individual can use gold in private purchases of goods and services, it is likely to escape government notice and taxation.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    25. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm...I'm no proponent of going back to the gold standard, but your reasoning is totally flawed.
      If the US did indeed go back to the gold standard, then either you keep using the existing notes and the price of gold goes up to reflect the amount of cash in circulation, or more likely new notes would be issued to replace the existing notes, each being worth a set amount of gold (theoretically) held by the government.

    26. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      The people who support government-issued fiat currency are supporting the government's ability to defraud the holders of that money by inflating it. Any change, or no change, involves winners and losers, so the complaint that gold investors would get rich is invalid and indicative of jealousy.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    27. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      My biggest problem with him is that he is only in favor of personal freedoms that don't conflict with his particular religious beliefs. Though I wouldn't call that "suicidal", just somewhat hypocritical and clearly not Libertarian.

    28. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Crosshair84 · · Score: 1

      Such as?

      Compare that with fiat currencies, which have a 100% record of failure. Every single one has eventually been debased to the point of collapse.

    29. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Crosshair84 · · Score: 1

      Using your own logic, it is also not possible for the dollar to function as currency because there isn't enough dollars in the world to pay for one years production either. (M1 is at about 1.6 trillion.)

      The flaw in your thinking is twofold.

      1. You don't get to use the gold only once. It cycles again and again just like dollars do today.

      2. The market price of gold would adjust to its market equilibrium.

    30. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but his primary idea is that people should not be able to force their ideas on you at the point of a gun

      That's precisely the idea that guys like Brett Buck don't like.

    31. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Sique · · Score: 1

      1. There is more than one currency in the world, and if we all go back to the gold standard, all currencies have to be converted. Yes, not all money has to be printed into paper, but no one ever called the dollar "a dollar bill backed security". Yes, the Federal Reserve would run into a problem if everyone went and tried to sell its assets noted in dollar into actual dollar bills. But that would be more a logistical problem. I don't need dollar bills to pay in dollar, I could just use cheques or credit cards. But if the dollar is backed by gold, the Federal Reserve actually has to stock enough real gold to allow for that situation. (Switzerland did at least store enough gold to convert 40% of the swiss M1 into gold until recently).

      2. And the market price of gold would skyrock (more than hundredfold according to current prices), and only people owning gold now would profit, everyone else loses out. I would call that "a big, governmentally mandated wealth redistribution."

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    32. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Sique · · Score: 1

      Do some econ101 and find out why my statement isn't. Yes, I know, money circulation etc.etc.. But if a currency is backed by gold, it means that I can replace the whole currency (not only paper bills, but also coins, savings and checking accounts) with gold. If I am not, then the currency is not fully backed by gold. And if the gold in stock is only enough to replace a certain amount of all money in M1, then the situation is really not that different from now, the amount of money that can be actually replaced by gold is up to negotiations, and if the need arises, a government will drop the backing quote to what is politically opportune at the moment. And we have not only to replace a single currency, we have to replace all currencies (or at least the most important ones) with gold, otherwise it won't work - all gold would immediately flow out of the country with the gold backed currency to make up for the trade deficit.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    33. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Sique · · Score: 1

      But the gold is not actually held by the government. And there will be a certain quote of money that can not replaced by gold at any given time. This quote is totally open to manipulation and to political negotiations - not very much different than today.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    34. Re:Isnt he the "king of libertarians"? by Common+Joe · · Score: 1

      This. I wonder who the grandparent (and everyone else putting Ron Paul down) would have voted for. I don't think there was one candidate that shouldn't have the "loony" stamp applied.

      I think anyone who puts Ron Paul down without putting down Romney and Obama at the same time isn't seeing things clearly. I'm not saying we shouldn't mock Ron Paul and call him out when he fails his own ideologies. We very much should... but I get pretty tired of people mocking him and then going back to supporting the usual Republican and Democratic candidates. Ron Paul actually had detailed plans and suggestions. Neither Romney nor Obama had anything close to the amount of detail that Ron Paul presented. Despite Ron Paul's failings, he sounded a hell of a lot better and more logical than Romney and Obama did IMHO.

  6. RonPaul.WhoCares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, um... Ron Who? Didn't he run for President once? Or twice? Or twenty-three times? Is he still around?

  7. That mailing list is worth it's weight in gold by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    You have 170,000 people that are known suckers. Hell you would probably have a hit rate of 40-50% on even a 419 scam with those people.

    1. Re:That mailing list is worth it's weight in gold by punker · · Score: 1

      How much does an email list weigh? Do you need to print it out to weigh it? Or can you just stick it on a flash drive and weight that? Could dramatically affect the price if weight is the unit of measure.

  8. sweet.. by mevets · · Score: 2

    Whenever evil wins, it is only by default: by the moral failure of those who evade the fact that there can be no compromise on basic principles.

    -Ayn Rand

    [ regardless, she is still a horses ass ]

    1. Re:sweet.. by i+kan+reed · · Score: 2

      Amazingly that statement also encapsulates the shortcomings of objectivism and its attached political philosophies. Evil can also win by being manipulative, violent, or culturally embraced.

    2. Re:sweet.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is quite a bit of evil that happens because people cant compromise on basic principles as well. And that depends on how you define evil.

    3. Re:sweet.. by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      It sounds good to quote Ayn Rand until you realize that when she says "moral" it has basically no connection to what would be generally understood as "morality".

    4. Re:sweet.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Rand quotes are always hilarious and especially here since it's one hypocrites quote in a thread about another hypocrite.

      (Rand lived off government welfare while criticizing it)

    5. Re:sweet.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whenever evil wins, it is only by default: by the moral failure of those who evade the fact that there can be no compromise on basic principles.

      -Ayn Rand

      [ regardless, she is still a horses ass ]

      Of course she is a horse's ass, one can not write or speak on politics without producing some horse shit. Or at least some will perceive it as that, even if it is bull shit from the opposition.

    6. Re:sweet.. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      That's because the modern understanding of "morality" is "pious self destruction".

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    7. Re:sweet.. by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Or evading the social responsibilities necessary for a well-functioning *civilization* - placing your uncompromising basic principles above helping the less fortunate in need seems to be fairly evil in itself.

    8. Re:sweet.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      placing your uncompromising basic principles above helping the less fortunate in need seems to be fairly evil in itself.

      That's the beauty of it, when you come up with your own morality system, you get to define what is and isn't evil, and you don't have to care what other people think!

  9. Geting control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Anyone going to get control of the title on the slashdot post?

  10. Part of free markets is brand protection by hessian · · Score: 1

    I can see Ron Paul's side of things.

    He needs to control his brand, and to own it outright. Thus, he benefits not only from having ownership, but having his legal right made clear.

    When we first look at this story, it's like "LOL irony afoot. Free market, bitches!"

    But after some sober contemplation, one can see the wisdom of the Ron Paul team's position.

    I still think that, were Ron Paul to adopt the foreign policy outlook of his son Rand, he would be electable overnight.

    1. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by Chirs · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He needs to control his brand, and to own it outright. Thus, he benefits not only from having ownership, but having his legal right made clear.

      Of course he benefits from having ownership...but that doesn't necessarily give him the right to take it away from the current owners. They bought the domain name, they built the site, they generated the traffic, and now he wants it arbitrarily transferred to him? That doesn't seem right.

    2. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But after some sober contemplation, one can see the wisdom of the Ron Paul team's position.

      Are you sure? I was sober, contemplative and really trying about quarter hour ago: it didn't make sense. Then, I had 2 quick shots of tequila and I'm dousing them with a beer: su'prise, surp-hic-prise... it started to feel like wise position, but... funny... 'tis more like a feeling of guts, I still don't get it why it's wise.

    3. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They built it on the notoriety of someone else's brand. They did not have a right to do so to begin with. It's not arbitrary. Of course, he should have prevented them to begin with and not done it after all the work was completed, but that doesn't change the position.

    4. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      one can see the wisdom of the Ron Paul team's position

      Only if you're a proctologist...

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    5. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by Slyfox696 · · Score: 1

      I can see Ron Paul's side of things.

      He needs to control his brand, and to own it outright.

      Which he can do with RonPaul.org, which has been offered to him as a free gift. This isn't about controlling his brand, this is trying to get other people's hard work for free and making a hypocrite out of himself in doing so.

    6. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      I can see Ron Paul's side of things.

      Sure, I can see why he wants it. Yes, it is rational. It would benefit him.

      I want an army of fembots.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    7. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by fermion · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The possible irony has nothing to do with the free markets. It has to do with his view of the UN.

      For example

      Its global planners fully intend to expand the UN into a true world government, complete with taxes, courts, and a standing army. This is not an alarmist statement;

      So the UN is trying to destroy the US. This is not alarmist, simple the facts

      we either follow the Constitution or submit to UN global governance

      If we follow the UN, we are not being faithful to the constitution of the US

      As such, the Charter is neither politically nor legally binding upon the American people or government. The UN has no authority to make “laws” that bind American citizens

      Even if the UN says the domain is his, the UN has no legal authority to make it his, at least in the US.

      Like any government or quasi-government body, the UN is rife with corruption and backroom deals. Worst of all, it serves as a forum for rampant anti-Americanism. Perhaps the time has finally come when more Americans will choose to rethink our participation.

      So by going to the UN, he might as well be asking Al Qaeda for help. He is hob nobbing with terrorist who are against America.

      Ron Paul is the worst kind of Texas Politicians. He will do whatever his friends want, no matter what it does to the budget. His friends wanted a million dollar bus stop so he gave it to them. His friends wanted a million dollar game room so their kids could play video games instead of train for the military like they promised, so he gave it them. His fishing buddies wanted the government to pay to advertise their seafood products, so, you guessed it, he passed a billed transferring tax money directly into their pockets. And of course when the nuclear energy lobby come a courtin', he is there to give them as much as they want, even though Texas ratepayers end up paying for everything all over again.

      As far as the free market, instead of letting firms decide what infrastructure is best for them, he mandates from washington what they need. He spent 2.5 redeveloping one the small towns in his district, instead of letting the free market decide if it was vialble. He spent 8 million redeveloping fishing pier instead of letting private firms take the risk and reap the reward. He spent 18 million on commercial waterways, instead of letting the private sector decide and pay for what it needed. And of course I believe an empty terminal for cruise lines is in his district.

      The reality is that if he were not such a crackpot none of this would matter. Just like everyone else he greedy and does not want to pay a reasonable price for property he considers to be already his. But he is a person who has used extreme language to win election and raise funds, over $40 million in 2012. That he would now validate the authority of UN is quite troubling.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    8. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by Shark · · Score: 1

      The domain is registered in Panama, is there an alternative arbitration authority for such cases?

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
    9. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if it is necessary to get our way, it is ok to make deal with terrorists?

    10. Re:Part of free markets is brand protection by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      So... a government-enforced monopoly on someone's image/name. Right. That screams "free market" to me as much as copyright and patents do.

      Well, I guess he would benefit from having ownership over the website, but I still don't see how this is not hypocrisy (not that that alone makes his position wrong).

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
  11. Time Value by balsy2001 · · Score: 1

    This is like having options on a stock except when the Ron Paul expires the value of the domain will quickly approach 0 (it may have been different if he would have been elected president, but I doubt his name will live on as a beacon of freedom for decades or centuries). Each day that goes by they are closer to a zero value option. I don't see much value in their mailing list because most of those people probably already gave their information directly to Paul by making campaign donations. If I were the owners I would start drastically reducing the price to make a sale.

    --
    GENERATION 27: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
  12. The One True RICH Ron Paul by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Property rights are the foundation of all rights in a free society unless the property we're talking about are domain names that you feel are yours

    I think this is unintentionally very funny because the domain name is his name, which is presumably his property. Now if he was trying to steal "campaignforliberty.com" that would be an interesting argument assuming they weren't just domain squatters who registered well after the PR campaign started.

    If there is a lesson, don't start up a 3rd party site with a name consisting of nothing but the 1st party name. Even "unofficialsupportforronpaul.com" would have been more morally justifiable than just taking the dude's name and slapping a dotcom on the end.

    So you're saying there's only one person named Ron Paul in the entire world?

    1. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Funny

      Being a libertarian is like being a Highlander. There Can Be Only One.

      In the case of a trademark dispute, the disputants are brought to the 'marketplace of ideas' where they compete until only one is left alive, at which point he absorbs the market share of the others.

      It's pretty fucking epic, actually.

    2. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Funny

      Being a libertarian is like being a Highlander.

      I'm puzzled, is this an incitements to go after libertarians' necks, or an incitement to have them dress in kilts and dance to vigorous, upbeat tunes?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    3. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by rezalas · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yes.

    4. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Funny

      Thank you, ambassador Kosh! That clears it up.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    5. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by Korruptionen · · Score: 1

      Great!! Now I want to watch Highlander. ... and this is your fault. :D

    6. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by rossdee · · Score: 4, Funny

      So is Adrian Paul from the same family?

    7. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by Sir+Realist · · Score: 1

      Bagpipe music, whiskey, and haggis for the lot of em... Last man standing wins.

    8. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Carpe jugulum

    9. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by Moofie · · Score: 2

      Mind. Blown. The TV show just writes itself!

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    10. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      Haggis is banned in the US, as the FDA has not approved offal for human consumption. Amusingly enough, if you're in America, a shift of power towards the liberiatian is the best hope of seeing it legalised again.

      This also applies to unpasteurised dairy products.

    11. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by Muad'Dave · · Score: 3, Informative

      Uh, no, it's not banned. The only thing it can't contain are the lungs (or lights), since they are extremely perishable.
      Lungs are a no-no

      Haggis vendor 1
      Haggis vendor 2
      Haggis vendor we use for our Burn's Night
      Canned haggis (it's not bad, but it ain't traditional)
      Lungless, low-fat haggis (ick!)

      --
      Tiller's Rule: Never use a word in written form that you've only heard and never read. You will end up looking foolish.
    12. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being a libertarian is like being a Highlander.

      I'm puzzled, is this an incitements to go after libertarians' necks, or an incitement to have them dress in kilts and dance to vigorous, upbeat tunes?

      No, it means the sequel is going to suck so bad your asshole will be pulled through your nostrils.

    13. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      This just depends on your definition of haggis. Being a traditional food, any deviation from the custom is considered suspicious: It isn't a tradition if you keep changing it. So many would consider lungless haggis to be not quite the real thing. Pseudo-haggis, or haggis-substitute. Close enough in a pinch, if you can't get the good stuff.

    14. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      I think you're trying to say that there is only One True Haggis.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    15. Re:The One True RICH Ron Paul by Catskul · · Score: 1

      So you're saying there's only one person named Ron Paul in the entire world?

      So you're saying ronpaul.com is about one of those other Ron Pauls?

      I'm only half being facetious.

      --

      Im not here now... Im out KILLING pepperoni
  13. Cant see your name on it by NettiWelho · · Score: 4, Funny
    Ron: This domain belongs to me.

    Fans: I dont see your name on.... ... ..oh.

    1. Re:Cant see your name on it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The owners of the domain should be a bit more judicious, and think of the potential bidding pool. In the US alone there are more than 100 people with the name Ron Paul. Each would have a claim on this domain. http://people.switchboard.com/results.php?ReportType=34&qf=Ron&qi=0&qk=10&qn=Paul

      The current owners should announce an auction, and allow anyone with the name Ron Paul to bid. Opening bid, $250,000.

      Good luck, and may the best Ron Paul win.

    2. Re:Cant see your name on it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I'm sure those other 100 Ron Pauls will have $250,000+ to bid on a domain name. Not gonna work out as well as you'd hope.

    3. Re:Cant see your name on it by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

      Is he the only one in America (or elsewhere, since he's trying to involve the UN) named Ron Paul, and did he lay claim to the domain a decade or so ago when it was available? No, and no. So to him I say piss off, you stereotypical politician, sorry about your luck. No wait... I don't really give a rat's ass, because I'm a libertarian and it makes no difference to me.

      --
      This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
  14. There are two Ts in getting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The title needs to be updated.

    1. Re:There are two Ts in getting by Megane · · Score: 1

      Only if the free market decides it's worth the cost of putting that extra 't' back in.

      (There actually is a cost involved; changing the title of an article causes the RSS feed to re-announce the article.)

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
  15. Any non-hypocrites in the Federal Government? by TheSpoom · · Score: 2

    The irony is thick in Ron Paul going to the UN for anything. Personally I feel he should probably get the domain but everything in it is the property of those who Built It, so he should get a domain with no mailing list and no content.

    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
    1. Re:Any non-hypocrites in the Federal Government? by balsy2001 · · Score: 1

      I hear www.ronpaulstoleourdomain.com is available for their new website after RP gets the domain.

      --
      GENERATION 27: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    2. Re:Any non-hypocrites in the Federal Government? by darjen · · Score: 1

      In a perfect world, the UN wouldn't be in charge of handling domain name disputes. Ron Paul would probably say the same thing. But at this point, the world is not perfect, and he can only work with existing tools. Personally, I don't think he is being a hypocrite and I think it's very likely he could have a valid right to his own name, as a well known entity that he is.

    3. Re:Any non-hypocrites in the Federal Government? by DarkOx · · Score: 1, Troll

      I commented already I don't think Paul's exception that site or domain be turned over without paying whatever is current owners demand is fair or reasonable.

      I also don't think its entirely fair to slam him for going to the UN. After all its how the current rules work, he has done more to oppose them than most but did not get his way. He is still a member of our society though is expected to follow the rules. His taxes were used to fund the operations of the UN just like yours and mine. I don't see why just because his expressed preferences are that the institution should not exist means he should get to take advantage of the services it can offer him, without being automatically called a hypocrite.

      Its the same thing when people slam Ayn Rand for cashing her SS checks, well again she spent her life arguing the rules were/are unfair. She lost at the ballot box so had to play the hand she was dealt; why should she have been expected to leave anything on the table?

      Now if your argument had been our society should *not* be governed by popular will than I can see an argument that using the rules to your advantage as much as possible might be hypocritical.

      I'll forfeit my rights to government services as soon as government forfeits its right to force me into pay the taxes that go to support them.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    4. Re:Any non-hypocrites in the Federal Government? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The free market would dictate a competing set of DNS systems: He can get his ronpaul,com from FooNS.

    5. Re:Any non-hypocrites in the Federal Government? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give me a break. He wants to use an international assembly of governments to force a private company (ICANN) to modify its data. How is that not a violation of libertarian principles? The libertarian should buy the property on the free market.

  16. Ron Paul is not being hypocritical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ron Paul believes the government should be stripped down to defense and a court system to handle disputes. Ron Paul believes that he owns his own name and identity and that others should not profit from it without his permission. He is going to a court to deal with a dispute over ownership of his name. He isn't trying to get that list of names for free. That is completely within his belief system. He believes in the Judicial branch and not the Legislation branch. We shouldn't have people paid to protect our environment. We should instead have enormous amounts of litigation with people suing polluters.

    1. Re:Ron Paul is not being hypocritical by ak3ldama · · Score: 1

      We should instead have enormous amounts of litigation with people suing polluters.

      We all know how that ends. We also know how that almost never starts. [Dreaming]Libertarian Ideals[/Dreaming] It is like the phrase: It is better to ask forgiveness than permission. Do wrong, get rich, get caught, get slap on wrist.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    2. Re:Ron Paul is not being hypocritical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Says you.

    3. Re:Ron Paul is not being hypocritical by BenSchuarmer · · Score: 1

      Operative phrase: "... without his permission...". Didn't the fact that he didn't do anything until now imply that he was giving them his permission?

    4. Re:Ron Paul is not being hypocritical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul believes that he owns his own name and identity

      By what right does he claim this? Private "property" (in this way similar to taxes) is THEFT because it can only be enforced by using violence backed up by the state. Using any court to enforce such a "right" is statism, plain and simple.

    5. Re:Ron Paul is not being hypocritical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We shouldn't have people paid to protect our environment. We should instead have enormous amounts of litigation with people suing polluters.

      Holy f***ing crap on a stick, are people really this dumb? Is anyone really dumb enough to believe that would be the best way to handle pollution?

      His actual position is that we should let the environment get trashed, which would lead to completely non-recoverable losses, and later we should hope that someone, somewhere, personally puts up the money to sue the polluters after the fact? The fact that anyone can actually think this is in any way a good idea is the most depressing thing I have heard today. If I was forced to think of examples of ways that government power actually benefits people, protecting the environment would be in the top few. If this idiocy is typical of the policy that Ron Paul pushes, I have lost all respect for Ron Paul, everyone who supports him, everyone who has funded him, and the last 10 places he ate at.

      Please, please, please, tell me that you were wrong in that he actually supports letting people wantonly pollute until they are sued (and lose).

  17. I see what he did there.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RP.COM: "The price is $250k...."
    RP: "250k!?!?? Are you kidding me?"
    RP.COM: "Your name is worth a lot."
    RP: "We'll see about that."

  18. No he isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If there ever was a "king of libertarianism", it would have to be Harry Browne.

    Note that many libetarians consider intellectual property to be positively ANTI-capitalism. If this story is true, I'm surprised -- and also disappointed in Ron Paul.

    Ron Paul is the "mainstream" libertarian -- that's why you've heard of him and not Harry Browne. IMO, Harry Browne was the thinker.

    1. Re:No he isn't by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Intellectual Property *is* anti-capitalism. Period.

      It's also reasonably good for society as a whole when managed properly. We've been failing on that last part for a few decades though...

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    2. Re:No he isn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "reasonably good for society as a whole when managed properly" needs some backing up. I posit the reason we've been "failing on that" in recent years is because most forms of intellectual property conflict sharply with important freedoms; freedoms people don't ask for, freedoms people naturally assume they have.

      Up to now, the only way I can see "intellectual property" and these natural freedoms existing in harmony is to do away with a lot of modern technology, specifically technology which enables people to process and share large amounts of information with one another.

    3. Re:No he isn't by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      Perfectly reasonable. Technological advancement has always affected the status quo, and the modern internet age is no different.

      Offering creators a limited term monopoly to incentivize creation of new content is good for society, that's how IP works. Pre-internet/computers there was physical costs/labor associated with duplicating and distributing said content.

      Now that duplication and distribution costs are basically nil, it will radically change how IP works, but that doesn't mean IP isn't an important concept that still bears fruit.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    4. Re:No he isn't by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Intellectual Property *is* anti-capitalism. Period.

      Not anymore so than regular property - both are creations of the society and its law (or custom). If you don't have either, you don't really have private or personal property, but mere possession (which can be changed at will by application of force).

    5. Re:No he isn't by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      They're somewhat similar but distinctly different in very significant ways. I can take your IP and you still have it. I can take your car and you don't have it anymore.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    6. Re:No he isn't by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I didn't claim that they were the same. My point was merely that both are abstract concepts, creations of a human mind that don't have a direct physical representation. This is extremely obvious in the case of intellectual property, and fairly obvious in the case of private property (the only reason why you are able to own several acres of land somewhere in a different state is because there is a government-run registry that records your ownership and enforces its recognition on the rest of the society). But even for personal property, like a shirt you're wearing, the concept of something that is rightly yours and cannot be arbitrarily taken from you by force requires social enforcement, and does not exist in a "natural state" - it needs property laws, and government (or some substitute) to enforce those laws. Without those, all you have is mere possession, and the strong can take from the weak with no repercussions.

      From that perspective, I don't see why regular property rights are not anti-capitalist, but intellectual property rights are. Both are limitations on the natural freedom (to take what you will and use it as you see fit). You can argue that one makes more sense than the other, but there's nothing that precludes capitalism in either.

    7. Re:No he isn't by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      The point is that stealing something physical deprives the original owner whereas using their IP doesn't deprive them of that IP. That's the crux of it.

      There is no deprivation when IP is used by someone else. Hence why we set up copyright to implement limited monopolies to encourage people to create more. Monopolies are anti-capitalist obviously.

      So are cable TV monopoly franchises. But by granting that limited monopoly, we get faster delivery of a network that benefits everybody rather than only for people who it is profitable to serve. Society is better off in that slightly less 'capitalist' scenario.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    8. Re:No he isn't by PoolOfThought · · Score: 1

      If it doesn't change the VALUE associated with it then no once cares if you "steal", "acquire", "copy" (whatever) their intellectual property (IP). That's what the patent system is. You say "here you go, here's my invention, how I do it, how I use it (though it may have other uses), how i make it, etc". You GIVE a copy to the USPTO and they PUBLISH IT FOR EVERYONE. But you do so for a guarantee that you will have rights to that property and get to decide how it is used. If you keep it a secret it is NOT PROTECTED INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY (if it is IP at all)... it's simply a secret... and if THAT gets out you're outta luck.

      Sticking with the car analogy (it is slashdot and you brought it up... kudos) I care if you steal my car because you having it means that I do not have it. That means that I can no longer use it to increase my productivity (towards whatever task I was involved in). If I run a taxi service using my car then I've obviously been harmed. If I had the only operating car in town then the amount of harm is significantly increased. Even if you don't use it and it just sits in your garage I've still been harmed.

      IP is different than just one car among many being stolen. Even though I can still utilize it when you have a copy I am no doubt disadvantaged (comparitively) if you use it also. Remember, I gave you a copy of it when I filed for the patent. But if you use it you have in fact disadvantaged me. In car terms we went from there being 1 car that I had control of to two (or more) cars of which I still only control 1. You not only misappropriated my IP for your own gain, but you're likely poaching my customers using my own property to do so. This all assumes it was patented and is in fact IP.

      Please note, I think there are plenty of opportunities for holes in what I just wrote so I'm more than open to hearing arguments (for or against what I said). The topic interests me and I am very willing to learn on this one from others who might have more experience / insight.

      --
      My present is the activity I am currently engaged in with the purpose of turning the future into a better past.
    9. Re:No he isn't by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      There is no deprivation when IP is used by someone else. Hence why we set up copyright to implement limited monopolies to encourage people to create more. Monopolies are anti-capitalist obviously.

      Capitalism is defined as an economic system characterized by private ownership of capital (i.e. the means of production) - hence the name. There is nothing in that definition precluding monopolies, and, indeed, many have argued that capitalism inherently favors monopolies - or at least that our history has shown it to be the case in practice. One can argue that monopolistic capitalism is extremely harmful to the interests of society as a whole, but that's a different point.

      And yes, you can't steal IP. Nevertheless, by using and redistributing it without owner's permission, you undermine the basic economic model for selling IP goods, similarly to how theft undermines the basic economic model for trade of physical items. There are obvious parallels there, just not on the most basic fundamental level.

  19. Libertarianism versus libertarianism by MikeRT · · Score: 1

    It would seem that doctrinaire libertarianism would be against this, but Ron Paul actually has a strong case for it because the two core values of libertarianism are you don't have a right to initiate force against another person not harming you or your property (or someone else) and you have no right to engage in fraud. Trademark exists to provide a way to clarify things in certain market transactions and marketing scenarios to prevent fraud. Unlike patents, there is a very powerful libertarian case for trademarks.

    But ssssshhh don't go telling most doctrinaire libertarians such things. Their ideology isn't really any more sophisticated than "don't tell me what to do." They are less interested in creating a sustainable free society than maximizing their liberty right here, right now even if that means they know for a fact it'll crush their children (ex. open borders which is a security, cultural and economic nightmare for maintaining a well-ordered society).

    1. Re:Libertarianism versus libertarianism by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      How is this 'fraud'? They're accurately and honestly promoting him. They aren't claiming to 'be' him at all, just espouse his views and policies.

      Trademark is anti-free market. It's meant to stop things for a greater good as you say. But that's not libertarianism. Libertarianism is that the market will correct itself.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    2. Re:Libertarianism versus libertarianism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong! Both libertarians and their faithful masters, the GOP are quite remarkably similar as they:

      • 1-Worship free market capitalism,
      • 2-Miss the good ol' days when African-Americans and other minorities were treated as less than dirt (Jim Crow laws, slavery)
      • 3-Are homophobic
      • 4-Are Xenophobic
      • 5-Believe anything that is goes against Christianity and the Free Market is evil, communist, of the devil, etc.
      • 6-Anyone that fits into #5 are not true American citizens and should be killed
      • 7-Want America to be an empire yet use states rights as their motto.

      I could list many more but then it would be far too long. The good news is the days of regressive policies from the GOP and their libertarian lapdogs are quite numbered as people are waking up and becoming progressive in their beliefs rather than regressive. The only ones that are regressive in today's America are the crackers that follow the GOP, many of which are inbred and functionally illiterate. Thankfully they are finally being weeded out of the gene pool and the minorities will be the white race which, as history has shown, has made the least number contributions to the greater good than any other racial group.

  20. Re:With friends like that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    What?? A shakedown?

    If he does not consider it worth $250,000, then all he has to do is decline the deal. The Free Market works nicely like that.

  21. Why should he be allowed to have it? by rs1n · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Let's put politics aside for a bit. Why should _THIS_ particular Ron Paul be allowed to "claim" ronpaul.com over some other person named Ron Paul. That combination of first and last name is not unique (http://howmanyofme.com/people/Ron_Paul/). Why should one person have a stronger claim to a domain name simply because they are more recognized by the public? I could understand the fight for MyBusinessName.com if your business is named MyBusinessName and said name is not some generic word/phrase. But whether it's Ron Paul or Michael Jordan or Joe Schmoe, I just don't see how it would be fair to all the other Ron Paul, Michael Jordan, or Joe Shmoe people.

    1. Re:Why should he be allowed to have it? by balsy2001 · · Score: 1

      A good example of this is Nissan the car company. They wanted nissan.com, but didn't get it because someone else with the name nissan already had it. This case may be different unless one of the owners happens to be named Ron Paul.

      --
      GENERATION 27: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    2. Re:Why should he be allowed to have it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      another good recent example of this is glenn beck, who wanted WIPO to sieze the rhetorical domain "GlennBeckRapedAndMurderedAYoungGirlIn1990.com" - not because it was defamatory, but because of trademark violation.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beck_v._Eiland-Hall

    3. Re:Why should he be allowed to have it? by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      another good recent example of this is glenn beck, who wanted WIPO to sieze the rhetorical domain "GlennBeckRapedAndMurderedAYoungGirlIn1990.com" - not because it was defamatory, but because of trademark violation.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beck_v._Eiland-Hall

      Not a good recent example, though - the UDRP decision did indicate that it was a possible trademark violation because visitors could confuse it with the Glenn Beck mark. Eiland-Hall won on the other two factors - lack of bad faith, and that he had legitimate interests in the name.

    4. Re:Why should he be allowed to have it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a good example of someone who supposedly believed in the primacy of american law and who supposedly despised international bodies who ran to just such an international body when american law wasn't going their way

    5. Re:Why should he be allowed to have it? by MunkieLife · · Score: 1

      Because the website clearly is about this particular Ron Paul, not just because he's the most well known Ron Paul. It's also not a commentary (positive or negative) about him, they are instead a front for selling mechanize, the profits of which purportedly go to his campaign - when in fact they don't.
      If someone was able to buy WellsFargoInsurance.com and started selling insurance using the WellsFargo trademark, appearing as though they were an arm of Wells Fargo, wouldn't that clearly be a cause to confiscate that domain (or at least take some sort of legal action against them)?

      If it was clearly for a completely different Ron Paul, I would completely agree with you.

    6. Re:Why should he be allowed to have it? by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

      Yep, I see no reason why fame achieved through holding elected office should afford any further special privileges. Courts have previously decided that you can't steal someone else's domain just because you are more famous and they beat you to it. Just check nissan.com for an example - you might think that would be Nissan Motors' USA site, but you'd be wrong.

      --
      This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
    7. Re:Why should he be allowed to have it? by Shark · · Score: 1

      In the case of ronpaul.com though, american law doesn't have juridiction, it's registered in Panama. Is there an alternative to WIPO?

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
    8. Re:Why should he be allowed to have it? by jbov · · Score: 1

      Yep, I see no reason why fame achieved through holding elected office should afford any further special privileges.

      That's good, because it has nothing to do with that.

      Just check nissan.com for an example...

      Comparing this to the nissan.com dispute is idiotic. The owner of nissan.com had the last name "Nissan", and used the site for purposes unrelated to Nissan Motor Company. The owners of RonPaul.com are using the "fame achieved through holding elected office" by Ron Paul to profit from his trademarked name.

  22. attention: alanis morissette by jollyreaper · · Score: 4, Funny

    This is ironic.

    --
    Kwisatz Haderach
    Sell the spice to CHOAM
    This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    1. Re:attention: alanis morissette by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That song is 18 years old. Get over it.

    2. Re:attention: alanis morissette by isorox · · Score: 1

      This is ironic.

      Like rain on your wedding day?

  23. 'Geting' in title. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about Slashdot asks for help with proof-reading

    1. Re:'Geting' in title. by Hsien-Ko · · Score: 1

      Retired politicain.

  24. Re:With friends like that by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Interesting

    With friends like that who needs enemies.

    This is nothing but a $250,000 shakedown by his alleged "supporters".

    "Back in 2007 we put our lives on hold for you, Ron, and we invested close to 10,000 hours of tears, sweat and hard work into this site at great personal sacrifice."(emphasis mine).

    They are actually quite honest: they invested in him(after all, altruism would have been unethical), and now they want their ROI. This isn't a 'friendship' thing, this is a 'VCs fighting with their start-up's CEO over stock options' thing.

  25. ICANN by ZeroSerenity · · Score: 1

    Doesn't ICANN normally handle these requests, not the UN?

    --
    For those who seek perfection there can be no rest on this side of the grave.
    1. Re:ICANN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes but they're using WIPO as the arbitrator.

      A bunch of people are going on about free-markets and the government and how Ron Paul is a hypocrite, but he's trying to solve this problem via contract law and arbitration per ICANN's policies. This is the free-market solution and not inconsistent with his politics.

  26. paging roman_mir ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    i would love to hear what noted troll and multiple account user roman_mir has to say regarding his beloved ron paul !

    lol

  27. are they engaging in fraud? by Chirs · · Score: 1

    I don't see any fraud...right on the main page at ronpaul.com...."This site is run by independent grassroots supporters of Ron Paul."

  28. Re:With friends like that by moeinvt · · Score: 1

    I can see both sides of this, but I think Dr. Paul is right.

    The argument is not about the free market price, it's about who actually owns the property to begin with.

    Does Ron Paul own his name? Put yourself in his position. Suppose someone registered $YourName.com, generated some traffic and built a mailing list. Was it their own innovation and hard work that generated the value, or were they merely capitalizing on your fame as a Congressman, author and presidential candidate?

    If they had done this with their own domain name, then yes, it would be a marketable asset. IMO, 99% of whatever value they created was because they used Ron Paul's property.

    Note, I am VERY disappointed that he would take this to the UN.

  29. Why the UN? by JTsyo · · Score: 1

    What about the website is IP? I don't see why this wasn't taken to the US courts if he thought he should have control.

    1. Re:Why the UN? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the US doesn't exist. Its a figment of your imagination. You are in the Matrix. The UN knows it. Ron Paul knows it.

    2. Re:Why the UN? by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      afaik domain disputes are resolved at WIPO

  30. who is ron paul? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and why should I give a fuck?

  31. Re:With friends like that by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 2

    Please. 250K, for over 4 years of effort by multiple people is hardly 'shakedown' levels. They built something themselves and would like some compensation to turn it over.

    --
    People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
  32. Best explanation (from The Atlantic comments) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    COPIED AND PASTED

    I’ll step up and educate you since you are in the dark on this issue.

    When ronpaul.com was purchased it came under law governed by ICANN.
    There is no way avoiding this FACT even if one was in ignorance of the
    law at the time of the domain purchase.

    Read the complaint. Tim Martin is seeking undue enrichment, clearly, from the use of Ron Paul’s name. It really is that simple.

    When you register a domain, in accordance with ICANN policies, you
    warrant that you’re not infringing on the rights of a third party and
    also agree to arbitration if a third party submits a claim. This
    arbitration process is outlined in what’s called the Uniform Domain-Name
    Dispute-Resolution Policy, or UDRP, and includes certain criteria such
    as trademark infringement and “bad faith”, both of which RP seems to be
    focusing on in his UDRP complaint. The WIPO, a UN agency, is one of
    several organizations authorized by ICANN to offer this arbitration
    service for a fee.

    Ron Paul is the owner of RON PAUL U.S. trademark. Ron Paul has
    acquired rights in the mark by virtue of it’s use within the United
    States, including a large volume of sales of Dr. Paul’s books.
    The RON PAUL mark has achieved a secondary meaning associated with Ron
    Paul sufficient to establish common law trademark rights. RON PAUL has
    long been associated with Dr. Paul’s books, articles, public
    appearances, and political commentary.”

    On the 7th page of Ron Paul’s complaint. The fun part begins on the 7th page:

    http://www.ronpaul.com/images/Complaint.pdf

    If it’s true that he owns the trademark RON PAUL,
    he absolutely has the right to take back RonPaul.com. Do you think that
    if someone happened to buy Walmart.com before walmart had a chance to
    get it that they wouldn’t be able to get it back?

    And for those that are complaining about this whole UN thing.

    Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) is the standard
    international (since domains and .com can be purchased from anyone
    around the globe) means of re-acquiring domain names that business and
    individuals own trademark to. The fact that they are associated with the
    UN is a mute point.

    Name me another organization that works to give brand owners back the ownership of the domain associated with their brand.

    As a graphic and web designer, I am familiar with UDRP and had to
    submit a request with them for a client that needed a website back that
    they held the trademark rights to. So am I somehow evil for working with
    a group that is associated with the UN?

    In fact, a quick google search came up with this:

    “The UDRP is followed by ALL REGISTRARS of the following generic
    top-level domain (gTLD) names: .aero, .asia, .biz., .cat, .COM, .coop, .info, .jobs, .mobi, .museum, .name, .net, .org, .pro, .tel, .travel and .xxx. The UDRP has been adopted by all accredited gTLD domain-name
    registrars. Thus the UDRP is incorporated into every gTLD domain name
    Registration Agreement, which is the agreement between the accredited
    registrar and the registrant, providing for registration of a domain
    name. ”

    Emphasis added to ALL REGISTRARS and .COM.

    And as far as I can tell, there are no alternatives to using UDRP to
    recover domains names in disputes such as this. So to push back on the
    use of UDRP as somehow against free market or against Ron Paul’s
    character or integrity is a disservice to the man and the legacy he’s
    given us.

    GIVE THE MAN HIS DOMAIN.

    Obvious future result is obvious

    1. Re:Best explanation (from The Atlantic comments) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think that if someone happened to buy Walmart.com before walmart had a chance to get it that they wouldn’t be able to get it back?

      I don't think you understand what the word 'back' means.

    2. Re:Best explanation (from The Atlantic comments) by Shark · · Score: 1

      People, please mod this up.

      --
      Mind the frickin' laser...
  33. Out Of The Closet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ron Paul comes out !

    At his age the owners might just be able to keep this in the courts until he dies.

    Otherwise, start FuckRonPaul.com, *.org, *.net, ad infinitum and welcome him
    to 'claim jumping' attempts on those too.

  34. Less Ron Paul, More Les Paul by drainbramage · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul is not a capitalist, he is a politician.
    It can be fun watching him stir the pot but never forget he stirs the pot for his own political aims.
    I prefer listening to Les Paul, maybe even Rand Paul, but Ron is a bit of a nutter.

    --
    No brain, no pain.
  35. $848,000.00 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here is the actual complaint:
    http://www.ronpaul.com/images/Complaint.pdf

    Interestingly, the current ronpaul.com owners originally asked Ron Paul for $848,000 for only the domain name.

    Respondents clearly are using and commercially. When a respondent profits from a domain name, it is not making legitimate noncommercial or fair use of the domain name. King v. Alberta Hot Rods, 2005 UDRP Lexis 389, 9 (2005). In this case, the Respondents are using for commercial purposes in three ways: (I) Respondents are leasing to a third party for a fee; (2) Respondents has offered to sell and to Complainant for $848,000 (now $250,000); and (3) Respondents are selling Ron Paul merchandise on the websites, including Ron Paul bumper slickers, t-shirts, posters, mugs, speakers, mousepads, shoes, tics and other "Ron Paul" gear, as well as advertising on the sites. A screenshot from is attached hereto as Annex 9. In King, a WIPO panel found that the respondent showed intent for commercial gain because its website displayed commercial banners from which respondent profited.

  36. In defense of Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder how much of this is his own doing (rather than some zealous staffer). He's mentioned specifically as the complainant, but Douglas Cuthbertson (lawyer fellow - don't care enough to dig deeper) is the contact - I suppose that's pretty standard?

    Also, DNS doesn't quite work in a free market setting because it's a distributed database with implicit trust. There's no well-defined ownership; would it be illegal, for instance, to start announcing a different IP for ronpaul.com somewhere along the DNS chain? No idea, it'd probably come down to intent going before some judge with no precedent to go on and limited tech skills at his disposal.

    Furthermore, in a free market, Paul's first recourse to unfair business practices (in his opinion) would presumably be to go to a powerful consumer agency. We don't live in a free market so there isn't one.

    Just some thoughts - at face value I am pretty disappointed is Paul's handling of this though.

  37. Judging Truth By the Men Who Believe It. by TheSwift · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It would be foolish to judge the truths a man believes in by the apparent weakness or hypocrisy of that man.

    If a man claimed monogamy in marriage was good for society, but due to his own moral failure, had multiple partners, would we then conclude that adultery was best for all men?

    It would be best that we use our minds and experience to find truth and not look for the man who looks the best to decide what truth is best for us. Otherwise, we will just be sheep for the media to direct.

    --
    "With patience a ruler may be persuaded, and a soft tongue will break a bone."
    1. Re:Judging Truth By the Men Who Believe It. by MostAwesomeDude · · Score: 1

      ...therefore, be a huge asshole to everyone.

      (http://xkcd.com/1049/)

      --
      ~ C.
    2. Re:Judging Truth By the Men Who Believe It. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's this little thing about saying one thing and doing another.

      People tend to believe other people who "practice what they preach".

      Hypocrites don't automatically make the idea they are espousing wrong.. they are just one less respectable espouser of that idea.
      (Especially habitual ones, how can they claim to value something when they contradict it constantly with decisions in their personal lives?)

      It is useful to point out hypocrisy, so as to keep track:
      When on average the most ardent espousers of an idea prove to be hypocrites about that idea, the idea may begin to lose its supposed validity to others.

    3. Re:Judging Truth By the Men Who Believe It. by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      ...therefore, be a huge asshole to everyone.

      (http://xkcd.com/1049/)

      Ah, yes, the "[Kim] Dotcom Method..."

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    4. Re:Judging Truth By the Men Who Believe It. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to the United States of America.

  38. The irony here is so rich it gave me diabetes... by mclaincausey · · Score: 2

    A Libertarian refusing to pay the price borne by the market and instead appealing to regulators, no less than the villainous UNITED NATIONS, for an intervention? How can he not see that this lays waste to his entire political philosophy?

    --
    (%i1) factor(777353);
    (%o1) 777353
  39. Microsoft paid for "Mikerowesoft.com" domain by DragonWriter · · Score: 2

    Good question, and I don't know what the best answer is. But a software developer named Mike Rowe was not allowed to have the domain mikerowesoft.com because microsoft thought it was too close to their name.

    No, first because the issue wasn't bare "names" but Microsoft asserting its right to its trademark within the commercial domain (computer software) to which that trademark applies. Trademarks are names, but not all names are trademarks.

    But more importantly, Microsoft didn't win the case, they reached an out of court settlement where they paid the high school student for the domain name with a combination of cash covering all of his expenses related to building the domain and a variety of other goods and services.

  40. Cue the blue helmeted jack booted thugs by BenSchuarmer · · Score: 1

    5... 4... 3... 2...

  41. Re:With friends like that by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    aren't domain disputes solved at WIPO? Where else should he go?

  42. Re:With friends like that by Fwipp · · Score: 1

    Somebody else *does* own $MyName.com. Somebody who works in the same field as me, and could easily be confused for me by a Google search, which is actually directly harmful to my own job prospects (as opposed to Ron Paul, whose supporters are using it to rally support for him as a politician). But I'm not crying foul to the UN.

  43. Re:With friends like that by DCFusor · · Score: 1

    Perhaps he has no need at all for the mailing list they think is worth all the money, and simply wants to unbundle. Fierce negotiation about things like that is the norm in business deals. You want to sell me the entire album, I just want the single. Who is being a hypocrite? Who needs a political mailing list post-retirement?

    --
    Why guess when you can know? Measure!
  44. The should tell him to shove it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should tell Mr. Anti-UN to stick it up is ass.

  45. Re:With friends like that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They provided him a valuable service for 4 years. He wants to fire them. They at least deserve a severance package.

    The irony of the situation is that he is basically screwing his best supporters through an entity he wanted to destroy. You can't make this up, It is so absurd, the value of the domain is $0 now, regardless of the outcome. They might as well post Viagra/Cialis and porn ads there now to try to recover some value.

  46. He's going to pay as little as possible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fair price has nothing to do with it.

    He's going to pay as little as possible for the domain, and use whatever resources he can to do so.

    Its the Libertarian & Republican way.

    1. Re:He's going to pay as little as possible by moeinvt · · Score: 0

      Fair price has everything to do with it, and yes, he's going to pay as little as possible.

      He should not have to pay for the value of his own name. How much would the domain be worth if it wasn't for Ron Paul's fame as a Representative, author and presidential candidate? That's the "fair" price.

  47. He doesn't even own RonPaul.org by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a politician Ron Paul may have been his own man but he appears to have been ignorant of domain names. Ronpaul.org redirects to ronpaul.com and is registered by Martha Roberts of DN Capital Inc. of Panama City, Panama. This shows that Ron Paul was on autopilot and just recently woke up to find that a foreign company owns his domain names. I'm glad he didn't win.

  48. Another thought... by PortHaven · · Score: 1

    I think part of his concern, is that RonPaul.com is continuuing to be active politically, and not always with Ron Paul's views in mind.

    Thus there is concern about it being used to use Ron Paul's name to convey messages he doesn't agree with.

    And I think that's a fairly legitimate claim.

    ***

    How about I register StephenColbert.com, run a fan site for several years, and then start sending out Republican propoganda. Would Stephen Colbert have a claim for that domain?

    Trademark wise, ICANN has said yes.

  49. Re:With friends like that by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

    Who needs a political mailing list post-retirement?

    His son Rand....

    Fierce negotiation about things like that is the norm in business deals

    Perhaps you missed the part where he's avoiding said fierce negotiation by running to the UN...

    --
    People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
  50. So let me get this straight... by roc97007 · · Score: 1

    A free market guy goes to the united nations for help to acquire something that doesn't belong to him? Are libertarians ok with this? I'm not.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    1. Re:So let me get this straight... by moeinvt · · Score: 0

      As a libertarian, I'm definitely OK with the dispute being decided by an arbitrator. I can see an argument on both sides.

      Obviously the vast majority of the value of the domain and mailing list is directly due to Ron Paul's notoriety as an elected official, author and presidential candidate. It's not the talent and hard work of the people who have been using the domain. There should be some compensation to them, but Ron Paul shouldn't have to pay a premium because of the value of his own name.

      I'm a little disappointed by the fact that the arbitrator is the UN. A response to another comment I made stated that the UN would be the only proper venue for deciding such a dispute however.

  51. a few facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few relevant and interesting facts I ran across in looking into
    this:

    WIPO is not in charge of domain names, ICANN is. WIPO is one of the
    dispute resolution providers recognized by ICANN.

    According to http://www.icann.org/en/help/dndr/udrp/policy, in order
    to prevail in the dispute, Ron Paul has to show three things ("you"
    here refers to the current holder of the domain):

            "(i) your domain name is identical or confusingly similar to a
            trademark or service mark in which the complainant has rights; and

            (ii) you have no rights or legitimate interests in respect of the
            domain name; and

            (iii) your domain name has been registered and is being used in
            bad faith."

    Among the ways of showing bad faith are

    "you have registered or you have acquired the domain name primarily for
    the purpose of selling, renting, or otherwise transferring the domain
    name registration to the complainant who is the owner of the trademark"

    or

    "you have intentionally attempted to attract, for commercial gain,
    Internet users to your web site or other on-line location, by creating
    a likelihood of confusion with the complainant's mark"

    Paul's complaint (http://www.ronpaul.com/images/Complaint.pdf) alleges
    that the current holder of the domain (whose identity is not known)
    has taken no action with regard to the domain name other than leasing
    to a third party for a fee.

    Paul's complaint includes extended arguments that the three conditions
    above are met.

  52. Re:With friends like that by moeinvt · · Score: 1

    "Somebody else *does* own $MyName.com. Somebody who works in the same field as me, "

    That sort of sucks, but is $YourName eq $TheirName or are they simply capitalizing on $YourName for their own profit?

    If it was the latter, I think you'd have a legitimate claim that you should get the domain for a small fee.

  53. If he wanted it by Khashishi · · Score: 1

    he should have trademarked his name.

  54. Double agent cares only for son, Rand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ron Paul was always a double agent, actually rallying support amongst the disaffected, so this group could be logged, monitored and controlled by the establishment. As usual, the second generation is given the rewards earned by the father- so Rand Paul is promised all kinds of high flying political opportunities by the Republican Party.

    We had the same thing in the UK, with a loathsome individual called 'Tony' Benn. This scumbag was actually a high ranking member of the aristocracy, but when in the 1950s it became increasingly obvious that the establishment controlled Labour Party was in danger of being taken over by genuine working class interests, Benn offered to 'reinvent' himself as a reformed toff, and now ordinary 'man of the people'. He headed a movement called 'CND' (campaign against nuclear weapons), to ensure the British intelligence services could control and manage any real grassroots political threat against Britain's massive nuclear arsenal. Decades later, all the major leaders of CND had senior positions in Labour governments, and ALL supported war and Britain's nuclear weapons programs.

    Benn himself oversaw a program to provide Israel with massive amounts of Plutonium from Britain's main military nuclear power station during his time as government minister in the 1960s. All the time Benn rallied socialist and anti-war supporters. Everyone of them was logged by MI5.

    When Tony Benn finally got too old, just like Ron Paul, his son was well placed in parliament, and is a major supporter of Tony Blair (and Blair's current LibCon puppets), and the UK's rolling program of aggressive wars and massive increase in disparity between the rich and poor. Benn's slimy offspring reaps the reward of Daddy's long service to the 'Crown'.

    Ron Paul is just another Tony Benn. His son is a little less slimy to the naked eye, and therefore is semi considered for continuing his Dad's legacy. Rand, however, seems keener to 'cash in' his Dad's reward, and grab some ordinary glory in the Republican Party. This means that memories of dear old Dad's double-dealing with the 'Libertarian' movement need to be forgotten as soon as possible. The voters have a (very) short memory, so the erasing of Ron Paul's most 'offocial' site on the Internet will get the job done nicely.

  55. Depends on how you look at it by MikeRT · · Score: 1

    This may not necessarily be fraudulent, but should someone be allowed to appropriate your well-known name and use it for purposes that may or may not overlap with your goals? It may not be fraudulent, but it falls within the range of things trademark is meant to restrict and can reasonably restrict under a libertarian regime. For example, it would be one thing to protect "Ford Auto Owners Club" as a non-trademark infringement. However if a bunch of hobbyists got together and created "Ford Custom Kits" under a libertarian regime that would be sufficiently close to the initiation of fraud by virtue of trying to play off someone else's name to win business that Ford would have a legitimate right under a libertarian regime to sue.

    1. Re:Depends on how you look at it by Urkki · · Score: 1

      It's been implied that Ron Paul has knowingly benefitted from operation of this domain. I don't know if it means anything legally, but it does mean Ron Paul has morally validated the situation, and indicated he has no problem with it. So, what he does now is both hypocritical, unethical, and demonstration of why libertarianism will never work: even its most ardent supporters are willing to use non-libertarian methods to get their way, when there's a way and a reason. And there always is a way, even in pure anarchy, and reasons always appear too. Always.

  56. As a Libertarian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am ashamed of this so called Liberterian. To demand that a government take away someone else's property that they bought and paid for is an abomination of everything we stand for. Go away old man.

  57. Re:With friends like that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Note, I am VERY disappointed that he would take this to the UN.

    who would you have him take it to?

    there is a process for resolving these disputes, and it involves exactly what he's done.

  58. Prior art? by CaptainNerdCave · · Score: 1

    I believe the argument comes down to "prior art", and that Ron Paul established his trademark and brand long before the owners of ronpaul.org and ronpaul.com.

  59. not hypocrisy at all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I paid for social security, I sure as hell am going to collect on it!

  60. welcome to the real world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The argument is not about the free market price, it's about who actually owns the property to begin with.

    First one to register with ICANN, unless the name is already filed with the trademark office. In this case it wasn't.

    We currently operate a common law system, and there are numerous court cases that demonstrate that you don't own exclusive rights to your own name. For example, a mechanic named Michael Mayo, cannot operate a Mayo Auto Clinic. Sure it's an amusing tongue-in-cheek name, but he lost that case. There are huge stacks of court cases that demonstrate that just because your parents gave you a name doesn't mean you own ever aspect of it.

  61. Ron Paul What Are You Thinking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a former supporter of Ron Paul, what I find most unbelievable about this is the fact that he would even go to the UN at all. Ron Paul was always very outspoken about the UN, and all of the problems related to UN intervention around the world. Now he is seeking help from the UN? On the other hand, I can understand that if someone had the website barrackobama.com, that Barrack might want it once he leaves office. I am not saying that is the case, but if it were, and although Ron Paul was elected president, he was a presidential candidate, and he did receive the vote of thousands of people. At the same time, $250,000 for the site can be looked at in two ways, 1.) Its a lot of money if you don't have it, or 2.) its not very much money if you got a lot of money. Which one of those includes Ron Paul is hard to say, but I would be lead to believe that he is in the latter. If so, I find it hard to believe that after years of a site providing a great deal of support for Ron Paul, that he would turn on them like he is claimed to be doing. ronpaul.com states, "On May 1st, 2008 we launched a grassroots website at RonPaul.com that became one of the most popular resources dedicated exclusively to Ron Paul and his ideas. Like thousands of fellow Ron Paul supporters, we put our lives on hold and invested 5 years of hard work into Ron Paul, RonPaul.com and Ron Paul 2012. Looking back, we are very happy with what we were able to achieve with unlimited enthusiasm and limited financial resources. We sent Ron Paul the following respectful offer [View/Download PDF File], explaining that we’d prefer to keep RonPaul.com due to reasons explained in our letter. At the same time we offered him RonPaul.org as a free gift so we could keep using RonPaul.com and he wouldn’t have to use something like RonPaulsHomePage.com. Our offer went on to explain that in case Ron Paul insisted on obtaining RonPaul.com, we would prepare a complete liberty package consisting of RonPaul.com and our mailing list of 170,000 liberty lovers. The value we put on the deal was $250k; we are getting our mailing list appraised right now but we are confident it is easily worth more than $250k all by itself. Claims that we tried to sell Ron Paul “his name” for $250k or even $800k are completely untrue, and there is little doubt that our mailing list would have enabled Ron Paul to raise several million dollars for the liberty movement this year. It would have been a win/win/win situation for everyone involved. Instead of responding to our offer, making a counter offer, or even accepting our FREE gift of RonPaul.org, Ron Paul went to the United Nations and is trying to use its legal process related to domain name disputes to actively deport us from our domain names without compensation." Even though I have supported Ron Paul for years, in this case I believe he is wrong in assuming that ronpaul.com should be his without any payments. I know if I had worked on a site for years, and supported Ron Paul as the site has done, that I would believe all my efforts are worth some sort of compensation. Had Ron Paul wanted the site, he should have went after it clear back in 2008. As for this site being considered cybersquatting, since this has been a working site for the last five years, I don't believe that it is cybersquatting. In closing my message to Ron Paul would be take the offer of $250,000, and get the site. Otherwise take the offer to get RonPaul.org for free, and let it go.

  62. If they offered it as a gift, wouldn't he own it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That doesn't make sense to say they would sell it if he wanted to own it.

  63. oh the irony... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I love how the guy who rails against bureaucracy is asking a giant bureaucracy to FORCE AMERICANS AGAINST THEIR WILL TO GIVE UP THEIR PRIVATE PROPERTY!!!

    Hypocrite is too easy of a word to apply here...

  64. So call yourself a weak sponging parasite. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because that's what you call those who take the money.

    And doing otherwise (especially changing your name to hide who it is sponging) is hypocrisy.

  65. Why is it wrong, though? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even if it were cybersquatting, why is it wrong?

    Why is Ronnie here using government power (supra-governmental power!) to take the ownership of the paid-up owner of some cyber land? Just because he has a greater need of it?

    Is he a commie?

  66. The truth will set your fee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Splicers believe in the Great Chain....until the Great Chain pulls away from them.

  67. he doesn't look like ronpaul.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In fact no human looks like it.

  68. Frivolous Litigation by Requiem18th · · Score: 1

    Isn't this a clear case of frivolous litigation?

    Context: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frivolous_litigation

    They offered the site for free as a gift, he refused and now wants to get it without paying the site's worth (as set by the site creators). So basically he is fighting for his right to not call it a gift. This is a huge waste of public resources, the same public resources libertarians insist we shouldn't have access to.

    --
    But... the future refused to change.
  69. Joke's on you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    oh

    You forgot the D'.

  70. Term Limits? Does that apply to Lobbyist/Staffer? by rsborg · · Score: 1

    He's managed to paint the government as a corrupt agency of fat-cat Democrats

    I wish this where true. He spent the bulk of the time during the debates and afterwards complaining the problem was Republicans. I agree with you about being glad he is retiring. I wish they would all "retire" after 2 or 3 terms.

    Ah, the whole term-limit thing... you see, the problem is that the lobbyiests and staffers quite well *do not* have term limits, and most legistlation is written by them these days. The head politician is just a figurehead, a "brand".

    --
    Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
  71. In This Topic by detritus. · · Score: 1

    Appeal to Hypocrisy fallacy to the extreme.

  72. I am not suprised by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that she took the money. After all, she is Jewi$h.

  73. Re:With friends like that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your example is a misleading strawman. Do I care how many people know my name? Do I benefit? Do I collaborate with them on this project? Ron Paul used them during his elections and his time in office. They were a functional part of his campaign apparatus. The relationship was symbiotic. He was not a private citizen, he was a public figure and he benefited directly from the website. Were they capitalizing on it? How much did they get paid, how much value did they create for Ron Paul?

    Now he wants the results of their effort. Fine. But he doesn't want to pay the asking price. It's not that he can't buy it, but it's too expensive for his tastes. So he uses a system that he railed against in attempt to exercise the equivalent of eminent domain, a process he was against, to seize something for below market rates.

  74. Weak Article by schneidafunk · · Score: 1

    I read your link because it sounded like a bunch of crap to me. In the comments, there is this:

    1. Ayn Rand died of heart failure, not lung cancer.

    2. Ayn Rand did not get her name from her typewriter. The exact origin of her last name has not been unequivocally proven, but research now suggests that Rand is actually an abbreviation of her given last name.

    3. Ayn Rand was financially capable of paying for her own medical expenses but made use of the Medicare and Social Security systems as this was in her rational self interest. She did not say "it was wrong for everyone else to do so." She addresses the issue here:

    http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/government_grants_and_scholarships.html

    --
    Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
    1. Re:Weak Article by schneidafunk · · Score: 1

      I would like to point out that I'm not a fanatical Randhead. I think her stories are naive in they completely disregard how America was built off a variety of slave labor, and glazes over foreign policy (military needs) completely.

      --
      Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
    2. Re:Weak Article by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      The proper phrase is "glosses over". Rand clearly states that defense is one of the few valid functions of government; so you're just lying like most of her critics.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    3. Re:Weak Article by schneidafunk · · Score: 1

      Yes, one sentence in 1100+ pages of Atlas Shrugged mentions defense as a valid function of government. I have read all of her books, have you? Where does she talk about how the military is suppose to function and be paid for? What exactly am I lying about?

      --
      Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
    4. Re:Weak Article by schneidafunk · · Score: 1

      She "glossed over" foreign policy and military needs. How is that a lie?

      From Atlas Society:

      Q: Your FAQ on "What is the Objectivist View of Law and Government (Politics)?" states "There must be a military force for defense against external enemies."

      What would this "military force" look like in an ideal Objectivist world? Would there be a standing military? Who would serve in it? Only those who would choose to do so? Or would the government have the power to draft when the need for service people was greater than the number volunteering?...

      A: Objectivism has no position on most of the questions you ask, and in many cases the same general answer applies: We'll see when we get there.

      --
      Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
  75. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    +1 insightful

  76. Re:With friends like that by Shark · · Score: 1

    The domain is registered in Panama, where else would you have him go but the UN?

    --
    Mind the frickin' laser...
  77. beautiful irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, the irony of a libertard asking the United Nations, of all things, for help enforcing one of the most artificially created (and government created at that), of property rights -- a domain name.

    Maybe now his dim reptilian brain may be thinking: "Hmm, maybe just saying 'property rights' over and over isn't the answer to all the world's problems...."
     

  78. The one with the trademark by jbov · · Score: 1

    The one with the trademark gets the rights, if you are profiting by selling goods representative of the trademark holder.

  79. Re:With friends like that by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

    Any old registrar he wants to register his OWN TheRealRonPaul.com site. Him going to the UN rather than just accepting that the market price is what they are asking is the problem.

    --
    People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
  80. ^ This by jbov · · Score: 1

    Someone finally got it right

  81. Correct by jbov · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up

  82. Can't Distinguish Investment From Scam? Pity. by cmholm · · Score: 1

    To be fair, you seem to be either 1) a doctrinaire right wing shill, or more charitably 2) not thinking through the economics business cases.

    Charles Ponzi promised payouts on profits from an arbitrage business that did no actual arbitrage (i.e. a fraud).

    Social Security works on the same assumption as most private retirement systems: money is invested in an economic entity, and payouts will come from future economic growth of that entity. Money invested with the US Government adds value by - in aggregate - providing an infrastructure within which profitable activity can occur, ideally leading to a larger tax base from which to pay future Social Security obligations.

    As it has turned out, the economics work for Social Security, and based on demographic projections, will continue to... provided that hucksters in the private economy don't continue to destroy more value than we can create. The economics cannot work for a Ponzi scheme, by its very methodology.

    --
    Luke, help me take this mask off ... Just for once, let me butterfly kiss you with my own eyes.
  83. I guess that explains by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    why ron paul's followers are so detached from reality.

  84. Re:With friends like that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does Ron Paul own his name? Put yourself in his position. Suppose someone registered $YourName.com, generated some traffic and built a mailing list. Was it their own innovation and hard work that generated the value, or were they merely capitalizing on your fame as a Congressman, author and presidential candidate?

    In my mind that isn't even a question. This was not a cybersquatter with a zero-value adding website... They bought the domain through legal channels which were also open to Ron Paul himself. They paid for the hosting and infrastructure to maintain this content. They built original content to attract customers. They invested their own time and money to create a product, and now Dr. Paul wants that product for free because he doesn't want to pay the free market price.

    It was not Ron Paul who created the value of this site. It was the developers, the designers, the programmers, and the managers who all invested their time to create a product that an audience found to be valuable. If anything Dr. Paul should be thankful to them for getting that sort of hardwork for free, as most political campaigns find themselves easily paying several hundred thousand for their primary website which drives donations.

    As for the "who owns what name" deal... names are not unique, so it is impossible to legally enforce ownership of a name without trampling all over the rights of the lesser-haves. In other words, "why should I have to change my name? He's the one who sucks."

  85. F7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ron Paul Asks UN For Help -->Geting-- Control of RonPaul.com Domain From Fans

    Spell checking goes a long way! :)

  86. Simple solution... by Dahamma · · Score: 1

    Just sell/license it to another guy named "Ron Paul" and change the content to something unrelated to the former Congressman. Then if this Ron Paul wants the domain, he buy it off of someone with unarguably the same rights to the name that he has.

  87. What a fucking hypocrite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He's all about free enterprise, capitalism, and smaller government, except when he needs the world government to step in and get him something he wants without having to pay for it.

    What a fucking hypocrite.

  88. Domain owners not looking so innocent. by Crosshair84 · · Score: 1

    I went and did some actual research and here is what I found.

    According to whois, RonPaul.com was registered in 2000 while RonPaul.org was registered in 1999. The current owner of RonPaul.org is DN Capital Inc, a company based in Panama, while RonPaul.com is owned by WKF Corp, another company based in Panama.

    This right here is sending up red flags. A "fan site" whose domain name is owned by some corporation in Panama? This isn't some Hary Alderson in Vermont who owns the domain name, as one might expect from a fan site. It is some company in Panama who, for all we know, may or may not be a shell company.

    Second, Ron Paul DID NOT go to "The UN" for this, he went to the WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center, whose JOB it is to settle disputes like this. There is nothing hypocritical about this. WIPO would exist absent the UN for this purpose. He may not LIKE the UN, but he is working within the system as it currently exists even though he would like that system changed. I don't like the city government where I live and wish it were set up differently, but you bet your butt I go to them when I have a problem or need something taken care of under their jurisdiction.

    RP wanted only the domain name, yet the "owners" of the site wanted to sell him the whole thing for a huge chunk of cash? That's not "Fan site", that's "trying to hit up a public figure for money and cash out". Wanting to sell the whole nine yards so eagerly, and for so much, doesn't sound like any "fan site" I've ever heard of.

    Sorry, the owners of ronpaul.com are looking awfully shady. Say what you want about Dr. Paul, the owners of the domain are not looking so innocent and it is looking that Dr, Paul may have a decent case for cybersquatting. We simply don't have enough information to be 100% sure. Considering Dr. Paul's past, I'm tending toward giving him the benefit of the doubt for now, but I would certainly like more information before definitively siding one way or the other on this. There is probably a lot of details that we don't know about.

  89. Funny as H3ll - Capitalism at its Best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you effin' kidding me? Ron Paul needs to 'pay to play' like everyone else...funny he chooses this route to get around his 'conservative' principals!!!

  90. pssh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I could get 500,000 emails for $10,000

  91. no hypocrisy there by stenvar · · Score: 1

    She paid for those benefits with her taxes, why shouldn't she take advantage of them? I don't see any hypocrisy there. She is still justified in arguing that she got a bad deal.

    Ditto with Ron Paul. As long as the UN exists (or other such organizations), he is perfectly justified in using them. After all, he could be a target of the organization, so he might as well take advantage of it. That isn't inconsistent with wanting to get rid of it.

    1. Re:no hypocrisy there by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      It's not as vague as "using the UN". He is attempting to use eminent domain rather than buy something on the open market. This is absolutely the opposite of the principles he espouses. There is no doubt he is a hypocrite.

    2. Re:no hypocrisy there by stenvar · · Score: 1

      He is attempting to use eminent domain rather than buy something on the open market. This is absolutely the opposite of the principles he espouses. There is no doubt he is a hypocrite.

      Ron Paul went to WIPO to assert ownership over something that the law says he owns. WIPO is the legal authority that makes this determination. Libertarians have no problem with people asserting property rights. Even if Ron Paul believed that this property right or this particular legal authority shouldn't exist, as long as it does, it's the proper place to assert his rights.

      Just because you have completely wrong ideas of what libertarianism is about doesn't make him a hypocrite. And I suggest you look up "eminent domain" if you don't want to keep sounding like a complete moron.

    3. Re:no hypocrisy there by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul went to WIPO to assert ownership over something that the law says he owns. WIPO is the legal authority that makes this determination. Libertarians have no problem with people asserting property rights. Even if Ron Paul believed that this property right or this particular legal authority shouldn't exist, as long as it does, it's the proper place to assert his rights.

      Libertarians have no problem being hypocrites.

      Just because you have completely wrong ideas of what libertarianism is about doesn't make him a hypocrite. And I suggest you look up "eminent domain" if you don't want to keep sounding like a complete moron.

      I suggest you look up libertarianism if you don't want to look like a retard.

  92. SATAN! by CHIT2ME · · Score: 1

    Rand Paul is the anitchrist. Just what does that make Ron? "Can you guess my name?"

    --
    My karma is bad. Don't get too close!!!
  93. Standard procedure for ICANN. by psyph3r · · Score: 1

    http://ronpaulflix.com/2013/02/ron-paul-has-not-gone-to-the-un-to-strong-arm-ronpaul-com/ [ronpaulflix.com] This is misleading and an attempt to make people think exactly what everyone is at the moment.

    1. Re:Standard procedure for ICANN. by DirtyLiar · · Score: 1

      Thanks for posting this.

      --

      THINK! It's patriotic

  94. Hypocrite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fucking hypocrite. Fucking Ultimate Paultard. Wahhh wahh the free market is not giving me what I want (they OWN it, you do understand the concept of private property, right Pautard ? You do understand the concept of freedom of expression even when the subject is YOU who have done everything imaginable over the course of your life to turn yourself into a public figure , right? ) so cry to the *very entity you've demonized as some huge motherfucking threat to the sovereignty of Americans*

    http://www.thepoliticalguide.com/Profiles/House/Texas/Ron_Paul/Views/The_United_Nations/

    to try to get your way.

    GAWD , why don't people this fucking shitty, self-serving, self-deceiving, and capable of such grandiose gestures of sheer unadulterated post-hoc special-exception-for-me excuse making which goes against everything they've not only claimed for themselves but also demanded every other person in the nation live under just exercise a little spontaneous combustion for everyone's sake?

    This is right up there with his fucking son's brilliant move to form HIS OWN doctor certification organization so he can get certified as a doctor.. by certifying himself.

    Paulites, libertarians, Ayn Rand coke heads .. people like Greenspan Jeffry Sach

    http://www.internationalist.org/jeffreysachsows1110.html

    and are just exactly what they appear to be poseurs, fakers, and con men with strong sociopathic tendencies that they dress us as their "economic philosophy".

  95. Priority of names by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    60 Minutes had a story about how McDonald's went after all restaurants with similar names. They even went after a restaurant in England called McDonald's that had been established for a couple hundred years. I don't know what happened to the suit. They say you have to be aggressive in these matters, otherwise people will think you are sleeping. A good counter-suit, on the other hand will do the same thing.

  96. So Ron Paul is a Hypocrite too. by DirtyLiar · · Score: 1

    So the New World Order, AKA global government, AKA not only BIG government, but currently the BIGGEST kind of government possible, orchestrated through the U.N. is a GOOD thing now?

    Or is it that Paul, like every other politician, is seduced by doing things the easy, instead of the right, way?

    Precedence says that those with the deepest pockets own any name they lay claim to, despite hundreds and even thousands of years of familial ownership of the name. That's why one of the McDonalds clans had to give up their their domain name to the McDonalds burger chain.

    --

    THINK! It's patriotic

  97. Ron Paul etc & Joe Snipe's comment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    T he Social Security system was a product of Roosevelt, President at the height of the depression, late 20's early 30's. The idea being that anyone working in the U.S., would have some money (for what ever reason) would have some CASH coming in their later years. While working, there was a wage deduction from everyone WORKING, to fund this. The Congress, who exempted themselves from the SSI (as they have done from so many issuses) set themselves up to administer it, and borrow money from it at 2.5% for whatever reason they saw fit. Their own retirement set up is invested in Blue Chip stock and has always done very well. Now the monies that You & I paid into SSI, they have used for Medicare, Medicaid & funding to immigrants, legal & illegal,refugees etc. Now it seems to me that You, I and all others who have been and are currently paying into the SSI OWN THOSE FUNDS. not the Congress, who are now saying that the funding will run out in about 30 years or so. They (Congress) prevented SSI surpluses from putting the funding into BLUE CHIP STOCKS in order to always make sure that SSI would not go belly up! They said that it would upset the STOCK MARKET!
    Now, RON PAUL, member of Congress, didn't decide to get his own Web Site, until long after, someone else at least two years previous had filed and got the name. Now he goes crying to the U.N. asking them....and they are not the ruling body for the Domains, in fact they tried very recently to get control of the internet system, backed by many Mid East places like Saudi. The rest of the world told 'em....absolutely not! Its a free enterprise system. So if POLITICIAN Ron Paul wants his own domain....Let Him pay the folks who currently own it, 'cause they are BRIGHTER THAN HIM!