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Silent Theft: The Private Plunder of Our Common Wealth
 
 
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Silent Theft: The Private Plunder of Our Common Wealth [Hardcover]

David Bollier (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0415932645 978-0415932646 March 15, 2002 First Printing
'They hang the man and flog the woman That steal the goose from off the common, But let the greater villain loose That steals the common from the goose.' - Traditional nursery rhyme Until a 1998 federal court decision, a Minnesota publisher claimed to own every federal court decision, including Roe v. Wade and Brown v. Board of Education. A Texas company was recently allowed to calm a patent on basmati rice, a kind of rice grown in India for hundreds of years. The Mining Act of 1872 is still in effect, allowing companies to buy land from the government at USD5 and acre if they pan to mine it. These are resources that belong to al of use, yet they are being given away to companies with anything but the common interest in mind. Where was the public outcry, or the government intervention, when these were happening? The answers are alarming. Private corporations are consuming the resources that the American people collectively own at a staggering rate, and the government is not protecting the commons on our behalf. In Silent Theft , David Bollier exposes the audacious attempts of companies to appropriate medical breakthroughs, public airwaves, outer space, state research, and even the DNA of plants and animals. Amazingly, these abuses often go unnoticed, Bollier argues, because we have lost our ability to see the commons. Publicly funded technological innovations create common wealth (cell phone airwaves, internet addresses, gene sequences) at blinding speed, while an economic atmosphere of deregulation and privatization ensures they will be quickly bought and sold. In an age of market triumphalism, does the notion of the commons have any practical meaning? Crisp and revelatory, Silent Theft is a bold attempt to develop a new language of the commons, a new ethos of commonwealth in the face of a market ethic that knows no bounds.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Silent Theft raises the kinds of questions that Washington typically represses. The book broaches issues that very likely are going to drive the next big turn of the political wheel. Silent Theft confirms the brooding sense, shared by many, of a system out of control.
Jonathan Rowe, Washington Monthly.
Bollier advances a powerful critique of the market über alles nonsense that is driving our nation and our prospects for genuine democracy into the ground. He argues, convincingly, that the privatization of the commons is disastrous even for those generally entralled with markets and the profit-motive.
Robert W. McChesney, Boston Review.
...get[s] at what I think is the fundamental, primary political issue that can be the underlying value for regenerating progressive politics in our country, and that value is the common good versus private greed.
Jim Hightower, Texas Observer.
The subject of Silent Theft is urgently important, and Bollier's handling of this complex set of issues is both deft and straightforward. The more people who read Silent Theft, the better our world. -- Norman Lear
A calm reasonable primer on a topic of enormous importance. Buy a copy, and when you've read it, donate it to that wonderful commons called your local library. -- Bill McKibben author, The End of Nature
A tour de force narrative that draws the reader into a high alert over what we have lost by allowing business lobbies and their captive government to turn rampant commercialism into the controlling ideology over our public assets and values. Silent Theft defines, with sure handed authority, a grand new mission for the beleaguered American commonwealth-that it should be governed by civic values not commercial, unaccountable supremacies. Enter this new world of human possibilities! -- Ralph Nader
This beautifully written, carefully argued book shows how little we learned from the past. Free and open resources have always been central to creativity and growth; Bolliershows how in a range of important contexts, free and open resources are being enclosed, to the benefit of the corporate class, and burden of Americans generally. -- --Lawrence Lessig, Stanford Law School, and author of The Future of Ideas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World

From the Publisher

"The subject of Silent Theft is urgently important, and Bollier's handling of this complex set of issues is both deft and straightforward. The more people who read Silent Theft, the better our world."--Norman Lear

"This beautifully written, carefully argued book shows how little we learned from the past. Free and open resources have always been central to creativity and growth; Bollier shows how in a range of important contexts, free and open resources are being enclosed, to the benefit of the corporate class, and burden of Americans generally." --Lawrence Lessig, Stanford Law School, and author of The Future of Ideas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World

"A calm reasonable primer on a topic of enormous importance. Buy a copy, and when you've read it, donate it to that wonderful commons called your local library."--Bill McKibben author, The End of Nature


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 260 pages
  • Publisher: Routledge; First Printing edition (March 15, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0415932645
  • ISBN-13: 978-0415932646
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 6.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,601,277 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

30 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Highly Useful, December 7, 2002
By 
Douglas Doepke (Claremont, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Silent Theft: The Private Plunder of Our Common Wealth (Hardcover)
Bollier has written a very useful little book, of particular interest to liberals, Greens, and Libertarians, as well as the broader public. The book's thesis holds that the 'commons' -- understood as our collectively owned assets, (natural resources being one example) -- are under steady threat of enclosure (privatization) by an increasingly aggressive commercial sphere in search of expanding profits. His use of the more archaic terms 'commons' and 'enclosure' to describe the process is a shrewd one, connecting current encroachments to those more infamous enclosure laws of time past. Despite appearances, this is not an abstract bookish issue. Daily, the public faces such benchmark symptoms as depleted public resources, brand-name idolatry, open spaces overwhelmed by advertising, and threats to an unfettered internet. Ironically, what is disappearing, as Bollier points out, are those very public and personal places that provide a market economy with the societal wherewithall it needs to reproduce itself. Inasmuch as the market has its own parochial definition of rationality -- one that has increasingly become the public standard -- such commons are too often unable to justify themselves and thus are contracted and sold, disappearing at an alarming rate. Government's role in aiding and abetting these enclosures is also detailed, and while the book is severely critical of market myopia, it does not call for their elimination, but for an intelligent circumscription.

Traditionally, liberals have defended the public sphere. This work should help provide some backbone for rediscovering the importance of that commitment. It is a call to arms for those who understand the long-term significance of what the author calls the "Gift Economy", i.e. a free exchange among parties, as exemplified in the conditions leading to the explosive growth of the internet. Greens should like the emphasis on community-based solutions, while Libertarians should feel challenged to justify their paradigm, given the sociological priority of gift economies. Bollier's style makes for easy reading, along with a helpful bibliography. The book is neither weighty nor deep, but it does maintain a steady focus and serves as a useful compendium for understanding the rapidly shrinking public domain, and what we are losing in the process.

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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars That Routledge prices an essentially POD paperback at $35 is ironic, February 25, 2010
By 
miss prism (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
Next time, Bollier might consider self-publication via [...] or a small press either willing to agree to a modicum of author-controlled pricing, or who can be trusted to have an incentive to sell to the general public, and thus to price low for that market, rather than assigning his copyright to a maximalist corporate monetizer (non-profits being every bit as interested in self-interested monetization as for-profit firms. Indeed, they tend to gouge the consumer much more than for-profit firms, sometimes due to the fact that their smaller markets are actually higher cost, sometimes due to their own inefficiencies). Authors are far more interested in free dissemination for the lowest possible price, that is, just over cost, than are publishers to whom authors hand over exclusive control. Authors should insist on retaining controls. If individuals retain controls and approvals over the use of their property rights, then they are able to defeat the efforts of corporate assignees to monetize their intellectual property inappropriately. That means that intellectual property rights must be defended, not condemned. Thus, the netizenry has leapt to the wrong conclusion in their calls for the abolition of property rights. Property controlled by individuals themselves is far more secure from the sins of corporate hoarding and aggregation that Bollier here deplores.
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11 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Nothing new here, February 15, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Silent Theft: The Private Plunder of Our Common Wealth (Hardcover)
Bollier does a credible hob outlining the issues surrounding the theft of the public commons. Many of the issues he highlights are unbelievable. Just thinking about how much of the public commons are being given away is truly astounding (the mining act of 1872 is one example that has always bugged me. A pretty good deal to lock up mineral rights for a few dollars an acre.)

However, Bollier comes up short in his recommendations. He outlines a few suggestions as to how to stop the "silent theft", however, many of his ideas will require a quantum change in how business operates. There is no way Congress will agree to any of them. I would loved to have seen him address how to jump that obstacle.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"The commons" is a concept that many Americans have trouble comprehending. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
market enclosure, gift economy, reclaiming the commons, global water supplies, stakeholder trusts, public trust doctrine, gift economies, copyright industries, common assets, sterile seeds
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Forest Service, New York City, First Amendment, Mining Act, Wise Use, Los Angeles, Sky Trust, University of California, World Wide Web, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Takings Clause, The Ecologist, The Supreme Court, Thomas Jefferson, Alaska Permanent Fund, Bayh-Dole Act, Bill Joy, Gary Ruskin, General Public License, Internet Service Providers, Time Warner, Adam Smith, Creative Commons, David Shenk
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