US Copyright law is in desperate need of an overhaul. Top to bottom it makes very little sense in the era of software and digital goods.
You can thank (Post-Walt) Disney for being the ones that led that push. However, I very much doubt they're going to extend it again when it's taken to court very soon because even the politicians in office consider the current copyright laws to be extremely scummy (95-105 years, after author's death, really?).
Despite that, I think abandoning the political process for the courts is a bit of a missed point. Sure pursue legal strategy, but changing the law is better because you can make the courts follow your laws rather than hope they interpret then the way you want.
You
DO realize that there are
dozens of laws on the books that are either illegal or unconstitutional, right? And, that the presence of these illegal laws are the reason why things such a mess right now? We don't need more laws, we need less.
It's going to be quite the uphill skate.
I can get behind that because we do need to find a way to overrule the hypocritical organizations like the NRA and the ESA (Owner of the ESRB) since they care more about lining their own pockets rather than protecting the industries and constitutional rights they claim to be fighting for.
Yeah, that's an issue.
You do realize that in every single U.S. election since 1964, the winner of the presidency was always decided by majority of the states, right?
Along with that, it's extremely inadvisable to remove the electoral college because, if you want to go by popular vote, then you end up in a scenario were 3-5 states can decide the fate that happens to the remaining 45-47 states. However, with that being said, you can't go completely in the other direction and have each state only have one vote, because then that's unfair to the more populated states of the country (Basically telling Texas and California that their 30/40 million citizens, respectively, have the same sway as Vermont and Wyoming's 600 thousand citizens). So, the electoral college is a compromise on that to give each state a say on what happens, but also give them the proper amount of attention that they deserve. But, then again, like I said, that hasn't really mattered for the past 55 years since every single president has been agreed upon by majority of the states in the country.
Yeah, they need to yank the 17th amendment.
and networks like FoxNews.
Why should we care about them?
The public's trust in journalism is at an all-time low, and
even Fox is suffering a loss in viewership (
Despite being on top).
EDIT (Update):
EDIT (Update) 2: