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Of
Patents and Pooper-Scoopers
by
Karen De Coster
I
detest the notion of patents. A patent is a man-made creature of
havoc handed down in the form of statute that revokes the right
of inventors to freely create a product that may too closely mimic
someone else's already-patented design. Therefore, aside from the
obvious property rights infringement, we have the problem of guaranteed
monopoly to holders of patents.
This
means that the public misses out on competing products, gainful
improvements, and better prices. Now this is very true when it comes
to pooper-scoopers. Now of course, I am going to drop all of the
technical Austro-libertarian reasoning on why patents are absurd,
because one cannot intelligently mix anti-patent theory with pooper-scooperism.
See my paleo-friend Stephan
Kinsella’s patent expertise in various free market publications.
Being
in the state of ownership of dogs two of them I can attest to
having a great deal of pooper-scooper experience. I purchased my
first scooper 5 years ago, and ended up with this archaic design:
a wooden stick that looked like it was part of a Fisher-Price push-toy,
molded to a sheet-metal, shark jaw-looking contraption that took
two hands to operate. So therefore, I was lacking a third hand to
hold the poop bag, and if it was windy and I set the poop bag down
while not heavily loaded, it ended up in the neighbor’s yard with
a couple of its tidbits inside.
So
I immediately set upon looking for a user-friendly scooper; one
that was easy for small, female hands to use. I came across this
wonderful spring-action design that enables me to tie up only one
hand while holding the poop bag in the other hand. The working end
of this little gizmo snaps open and shut like the jaws of a dragon,
and therefore, I assumed it was entirely up to the task of king-size
German Shepherd droppings.
So
I bought this thing, an Allen's Extra Large Super Scooper, patent
#5601321. On it hung a big old cardboard tag pronouncing its "uniquely
patented design" and "the only one of its kind". Operationally,
I love the functions of the scooper. Its "unique" design really
works nicely.
However,
several of its design flaws make it vulnerable to breakage. First,
the "unique, patented" dual springs always break, leaving
one to embark upon multiple scooper repairs. Also, the cheap plastic
is very susceptible to breakage in the cold weather. The spring-loaded
handle that moves up-and-down has a tendency to just snap in two.
And then, the "patented" plastic teeth that dig into the
grass always break off, as well.
Don’t
get me wrong, for there are several joys to this "patented" pooper
scooper. It’s the first one I’ve had that actually makes a messy
job easy. However, over the years, this product has seen no design
improvement from the original product that hit the store shelves
several years ago. The same stuff still breaks. This system of patents
doesn’t allow for improvements to existing designs by competing
producers, so why should the patent-holder make it better?
Just
recently, I found myself going back to the pet store for my fifth
pooper-scooper on 5 years. They last a year, tops. My first one
ran about eighteen dollars, and now, I'm paying twenty-five dollars
for the same old poop stick. And due to the wonderful world of government-granted
patents, I still have one choice that I have seen in that spring-loaded
design; there are no competing poop sticks out there due to the
protective nature of a patent system.
I
cuss 'neath my breath at my 80-lb. german shepherd/husky and my
chocolate lab each time it's time to scoop the gigantic mounds of
poop, and wonder why the beagle or the yorkie didn't seem more appealing
to me.
But
then I put the blame squarely where it belongs, and that is with
an anti-competitive nature of patents, disallowing competing products
of similar design, and surely one that may be better, may last longer,
and may be cheaper to buy. Mr. Allen must be a very rich man due
to the patent system. I hope he has a yorkie instead of a german
shepherd.
Amazingly,
I have come to realize that there is more competition for cable
TV contracts then there is for pooper-scoopers.
March
12, 2002
Karen
De Coster, CPA, [send
her mail] is a paleolibertarian freelance writer, graduate student
in Austrian Economics, and a business professional from Michigan.
She is writing her first book, which is a treatise against all things
statist. See her Mises
Institute archive for more online articles.
Copyright © 2002 Karen De Coster
Karen
De Coster Archives
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