From: T0Morrow@aol.com
Date: Fri Jan 08 1999 - 23:34:44 MST
Robin Hanson wrote:
>It seems to me a bit of an abstract stretch to say that if one induced any
>form of radiation on one's property, one therefore had implicit absolute
>perpetual rights to to use all forms of radiation, including say neutrinos,
>gravitons, Higgs particles, etc.
Had I said that (I didn't, but let's suppose that I did), it would have been
quite an abstract leap, I grant. But it would have been abstract only because
nobody puts those exotic sorts of radiation to everyday use. If we used, say,
gravitons to work our TV remote controls, you would still have to grapple with
my observation that,
>It makes little sense to say
>that the FCC has no claim over *one* frequency of radiation that I use solely
>on my property . . . while it does over another frequency . . . .
I followed with a counter-argument, by way of example, to Robin's claim that
the FCC can establish its rights to the spectrum by mere declaration. Then,
separately, I answered Robin's question about good title by summing up the
common law rule. Robin replied:
>Then by your preferred approach, unless you are one of the original people
you
>claim the FCC stole these spectrum rights from, you seem to have no standing
to
>complain. We all seem to accept that the FCC seems to be in "possession" of
>these spectrum rights. You just accuse them of having stole them from
someone
>else.
No, that confounds two separate lines of argument. Recall that I have
throughout argued *against* establishing property rights in the spectrum. The
good title rule thus does not apply (I raised it only in an attempt to clarify
a point of law). When you buy real property, you do not get *title* to the
spectrum used thereon. You get the right to use chattles such as transmitters
and recievers in any manner whatsoever so long as you do not interefere with
your neighbors' like uses. By way of analogy, your right to keep a journal
follows from your rights in paper, ink, and a private study. You do not get
title to "journal space." The FCC can no more claim all the spectrum than a
Federal Records Commission could claim the right to all personal notes.
>Furthermore, even if you did represent one of these initial supposed losers
of
>spectrum rights, you'd need to show that these people didn't implicitly
accept
>the juristiction of the government that empowered the FCC. That is, if these
>people accepted that their property was not absolute, but instead subject to
>constituionally-valid government choices, then it is not clear what their
>complaint is. Were they not adequately compensated for the "taking"?
That response moves too quickly from mere implied consent to "people
accepted." For an explanation of the various modes of justification of
political and legal authority, and of their relative weights, see "Why Obey
the Law," available off my homepage.
But set aside the question of justification. I trust that I have shown that a
good faith (if not convincing) argument exists to the effect that the FCC has
acted unjustly and unconstitutionally by claiming sole rights to the spectrum.
One does not end the argument with, "But the people implicitly agreed!"
Presumably, in a constitutional republic such as the U.S., good faith
arguments about public policy play a role in shaping the functions and scope
of the State. So to "the people implicitly agreed . . . " I reply, ". . . to
subject FCC functions to ongoing critical scrutiny."
Tom
T.0. Morrow
t0morrow@aol.com
http://members.aol.com/t0morrow/T0Mpage.HTML
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