Don't much care for canned worms.
Sometimes sounds like someone is uncomfortable with the implications of a debate going in unmanageable directions.
It is not as if this particular item, the Skookum, emerged from an anonymous collective consciousness, and therefore becomes the exploitable property of all. Fifteen years ago, Garcia applied himself, designed and produced an appealing, well-thought through piece which was priced affordably and thus rapidly became much-loved at a particular point in the popular mythology of bushcraft. He had the wit to involve Kochanski early in the process. It's his to exploit and benefit from.
Maybe we don't have to be too assertive around who designs or makes what and who benefits from the proceeds. There are often better things to worry about. I get that. But, 'whatabout' arguments aren't, well, arguments really. We have licensing and copyright agreements for a reason; to prevent ingenious, creative but poorly resourced people getting ripped off or having their livelihoods undermined when their innovations are pilfered.
In lots of ways, it doesn't even matter if Garcia is quite happy that other makers copy his knife with his permission. In fact, it doesn't matter if he is happy with people copying his knife
without his permission either! Possibly he benefits reputationally by being so generous. But, it is certainly a generosity on his part, because the question is a broader one about general principles of intellectual and other property rights. Much as some of us would prefer it otherwise, capitalism is based largely on the frictionless regulation of ownership. Small, entrepreneurial businesses like Garcia's are as much the ones intended to benefit from the protections afforded by that economic and legal understanding as larger corporations.
Duffing up 'small-guy' operations over copyright infringement doesn't often do a lot for one's prestige. Imagine what this site would have made of, I don't know, Mick Spain being hauled off to court. So, just because Ray Mears may have seen a grander marketing opportunity in terms of the narrative he was building in the early 2000s by not pursuing potential copyright claims about his knife (which he'd possibly have lost, in any case), that doesn't mean it is OK to nick people's ideas and profit from their efforts in tool design and brand development.