[0] Like me, right now, who thinks we should demand copyright term maximums
We have pretty good proposals to deal with this problem. I think the following seems sensible:
https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/house-bill/4368
>Partially because fringe people who want to change the law make terrible legal arguments
No one has ever changed the law to benefit the rich, no sirree.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/77/To...
It is our current system that is fringe. Copyright is practically permanent when compared to a fleeting human lifespan. Even when copyrights eventually expire, trademarks function as "a species of mutant copyright" to keep works protected forever. Companies like Disney profit off our shared heritage and then lock it in their "Vault" forever. The way human culture has worked for hundreds of thousands of years has been derailed within just the last few generations.
Radical changes to line the pockets of the owning class are sensible and legal and moderate, but wanting even the smallest change to prevent the slaughter of innocents by the Abbott regime is fringe.
Note that I don't necessarily disagree with you that reformers often make bad legal arguments. Making good legal arguments requires good lawyers, and only the rich can afford good lawyers.