EU The End of the Printed Book: The EU Wants "Deforestation-Free Products" - Not a hoax. Censoring and banning physically tangible things is hard, compared to digital and social media, after all...

Another translation by yours truly for the A&N audience. Source [A]
Update: 2024-11-12: Added another translation. Original source [A]

The end of the printed book: The EU wants "deforestation-free products"​

It keeps on getting more insidious.

Readers pointed out this blog article to me: The end of the printed book comes closer - thanks to EU regulations

Digital burning stakes for undesirable facts and thoughts are only fully effective when there exists no physically tangible evidence anymore. This is why the printed word has been a long-time item on the list of endangered cultural goods. Because, in spite of all the cost savings for e-books and audiobooks, the publishing industry makes 95% of its revenue with printed works, they're pulling out the big guns to put a halt to mental stimulation during power outages.

Allegedly, nobody is intending to ban books. Allegedly, freedom of speech isn't in danger. The European Commission is just worried about nature. And because books are made out of paper, they are a fundamental threat for our ecosystem. That is why they felt forced to put out a new EU regulation for deforestation-free products (EUDR - EU 2023/1115) which is mandatory and binding from 30.12.2024 onward.

Soon, everybody who wants to publish a book needs to prove exactly in what time and place the trees that the paper was made from were grown, and that they're coming from a guaranteed deforestation-free farming.

Confirmation of due diligence, that each product is deforestation-free and has been produced in accordance with the relevant legislation of the country of production, reference number of the due diligence declaration from the European Commission's information system.

At first I thought it was satire, a hoax. A mockery of the supply chain law.

But no, the [German] Federal Office for Agriculture and Food elaborates:

Deforestation-free products: New EU regulation explained in a video

Anyone in the Common Market who wants to distribute, provide, or work on raw materials and products which fall under EU regulation 1115/ 2023 starting on December 30 2024 needs to abide by certain requirements. The video shows what raw materials and market participants are affected and how the regulation is enforced in practice.

The consumption of agricultural products in the European Union (EU) is responsible for deforestation in other parts of the world. According to the agricultural organization of the United Nations (FAO), up to 90 percent of global deforestation is caused by agricultural demand. The main driver for this is the large demand for raw materials like palm oil, soy, and cocoa in consumer countries such as USA, China, and EU. For the sake of a successful international forest protection, agricultural raw materials must be produced deforestation- and forest-damage-free.

Thus, the EU put out a legally binding regulation. The EU regulation no. 1115/ 2023 (short: EUDR) is supposed to ensure the goal of deforestation-free production by means of binding company due diligence requirements. It has become law on June 29 2023 and applies - after a transitory period of 18 months - from December 30 2024 onward.

For the implementation and execution of the regulation in Germany, the Bundesanstalt für Landwirtschaft und Ernährung (BLE) [Federal Office for Agriculture and Food] is responsible. The BLE particularly monitors the market participants' compliance with the obligations. However, the corresponding state offices are responsible for the control of domestic raw materials and products from cattle, soy, and wood.

In the explanatory video, you learn how the regulation is put into practice.

Now I hope that this gets blocked on YouTube when I link to it:

[Preservetube]

I guess this falls under bureaucracy pornography.

I don't know what that's supposed to look like, but everything you buy that's made out of wood now has to tell you exactly when and where it's been produced deforestation-free? And who wants to check whether that's true, and how?

Recently they took our plastic forks and drinking straws. I guess the wooden forks and paper straws are next. Basically you can't even use chopsticks at the Asian restaurants any longer.

Of course the point is that this is unenforceable in practice. Because how is a publisher supposed to print that in their books? At the time of the manuscript, they don't know yet where the book is printed and where the printing company is getting their paper from. Or do they leave a blank field in which the printing company prints in the certification?

Of course this is going to be another nail in the coffin of book and newspaper printing.

Which amuses me in some way, because the administrative court of Berlin stubbornly sticks to the interpretation that "press" is exclusively what is printed and distributed on a substrate - paper, but in the legal sense also a CDROM.

But the reality will be that we will only get digital newspapers, magazines, and books, and not as a download, but as a kind of subscription, access right, to access them using a phone, ebook reader, tablet. And the rule that, what you put in circulation remains in circulation, no longer holds. If, for example, you legally prohibit a book, only the sale of it gets prohibited and the existing stock gets destroyed, but the copies that were already sold won't get collected.

And as far as I know the German lawyers, it's guaranteed they'll try to censor digital books and newspapers in the same way they do social media, and then they get to enforce that passages from already-sold ebooks get deleted or changed, which will be possible. Then the books and newspapers which you have already bought get censored.

And because publishers and book companies are infamous for getting more left-wing and corrupt, it's also predictable that books get retroactively inserted with gendered language and queerness.

In that respect as well, we achieved Orwell's 1984, in which it's already been described that newspapers and books get retroactively changed and adjusted to the political situation.

Deforestation-free greetings!

PS: Damn, I didn't even think of that one. But a reader gave the fitting comment:

Fahrenheit 451 is coming.

Fits like a glove.



The book is an endangered good​

The next absurdity.

A reader points at this article: The book is an endangered good - new declaration obligation in the EU

Apparently, there is a new hazardous material regulation according to which every product must declare who has put it into circulation.

The only certainty is that, from 13 December 2024 onward, every physical book that is put on the market must be traceable to the manufacturer.

Therefore, from that date on, the jacket must contain the name, postal address, commercial name, and e-mail address of the one who put the book in circulation. This is also true for copies that are already printed. The predictable consequence will be an orgy of stickers in the warehouses of the publishers and second-hand bookstores. For future copies, it will be necessary to adjust the jacket data of all titles in the PDF files for a reprint. The time, costs, and the corresponding environmental harm seem to be negligible. The big players in the bookselling trade have already threatened the publishers to de-list all books which don't fulfill the new so-called GPSR requirements ("General Product Safety Regulations").

Is this satire?

Actually, it's too stupid to be satire. This is so stupid that it has to be real.

But I'm thinking of something else. And apparently I'm not the only one who does:

The requirement to add additional originator information to the jacket seems to have the goal to allow for a quick search and destroying of books by warehouse robots.

I have written quite often that the intelligence agencies are currently working on a total opinion cartography, storing information on every citizen, what their political beliefs are, to put the people on black- and whitelists.

That way, you don't even need to bother looking at the content, open up the book or get it out of the shrink wrap, but you can immediately see where the person who put it in circulation stands politically and then sort it out, into the trash it goes.

Officially, it is obviously just about "deforestation-free" books.

Nobody is intending to prohibit printed books. It is just going to happen all by itself when the, now delayed by 1 year, EU decree EUDR - EU 2023/1115 for "deforestation-free books" and further regulations for alleged sustainability and consumer protection will be implemented. The included demands, the obligation to produce proof of the geo data of the wood used to produce the paper, are in stark contrast to the regulations for foodstuff and animal feed. In the supermarket, it is sufficient that a product has been e.g. "produced for Lidl" and that the ingredients are "from EU countries and non-EU countries", so at least from this planet.

Only the tiniest fraction of wood production is getting used as paper for book pages in the first place. The lion's share is held by advertisement leaflets, throwaway newspapers, and packaging material.

The trend is going towards the electronic book, and that is subject to constant changes and metamorphosis.

Shamed be he who thinks evil of it.
 
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I just... I just hate them SO much. Isn't wood pulp one of the best things to make out of recycled wood products? Leather bound books are probably one of the greenest leisure products out there. I guess you don't need to burn the books if you just don't print them first....

Obligatory "Oi, youse gawt ah loicense fer thawt leet-err-ay-terr?"
 
It's got nothing to do with censorship, censorship predates print. Printed books are extremely easy to come after if you've a mind to (go after print shops and imports), hard to copy once you have one in your hands, and hard/impossible to communicate and organize with.

If you're actually worried about censorship and fighting back with printed materials, the act of printing will be illegal at that point, you should be worried about your supply of blank paper.
 
Fun fact, if you want to remove carbon from the atmosphere then you want to grow trees, cut them down and use them for housing, books, etc, and then grow more trees.
Especially the trees that the civilized world (read US) uses for paper products, quaking aspen. The pulp barely needs any processing to make nice paper, cutting the stems doesn't kill the tree - thousands of new stems pop up without any human interference, those stems are ready for harvest in 20-30 years since they grow extremely quickly. If you don't need the area to keep producing aspen you just plant some other type of sapling to crowd them out. They're just not great for lumber.

Why is it that the US can manage its forests so well when no other country seems to be able to? Even with the recent eco-shift back to lumber construction the supply of lumber has grown to match after a few years of growing pains and the country is still increasing the size of its forests, at least according to the UN, while harvesting something like 100 million cubic meters of lumber each year.
 
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Why is it that the US can manage its forests so well
I agree with your insinuation that California does not belong to the US
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I agree with your insinuation that California does not belong to the US
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That's just some deity cleansing the land.

CALFire's inability to manage anything is the obvious, and very true exception to my post and I was hoping it wouldn't be brought up. CA might as well be Australia for its retarded fire management. When even the abbos tell you you're being stupid, well....
 
That's just some deity cleansing the land.

CALFire's inability to manage anything is the obvious, and very true exception to my post and I was hoping it wouldn't be brought up. CA might as well be Australia for its retarded fire management. When even the abbos tell you you're being stupid, well....
From what I am aware, the abbos are behind it, because California imported a whole bunch of eucalyptus trees without any care for their very high flammability
 
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In ten years time, we will see it criminalized all over the West to own physical media, and special agencies set up to sieze any physical media reported to their agencies.

Why will people agree to this tyranny? Because they are told it's good and they are good little nigger cattle. We'll be forced to hide our unpozzed copies of Lord of the Rings and Narnia under the floorboards, and subscription services will be tied to social credit. This is the future if we let these managerial lunatics stay in power. I pray for the day this environmental tyranny ends and we can get real envionmental activism again.
 
I thought they wanted more paper/wood based products as they wanted to get rid of plastic? Now they want to make "deforestation free" products? Can these people make up their minds about what kind of environmentalism they want?
 
I thought they wanted more paper/wood based products as they wanted to get rid of plastic? Now they want to make "deforestation free" products? Can these people make up their minds about what kind of environmentalism they want?
The kind of environmentalism where you own nothing and are happy*.

(*Expressions of dissatisfaction are hate speech.)
 
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