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posted by takyon on Saturday August 01 2015, @10:06PM   Printer-friendly
from the what-have-you-accomplished dept.

The UK's Pirate Party are celebrating 6 years since forming the party by launching a campaign retrospective; a series of blogs, posters, podcasts and videos.

On 30th July 2009, Andrew Robinson registered Pirate Party UK as a political party for the first time. Today, we are proud to celebrate our 6th Birthday, and launch #WeArrSix, our Pirate Party campaign retrospective.

Over the last 6 years, the world has changed dramatically, but Pirate Party UK have campaigned tirelessly for civil liberties, digital freedoms and democratic reform. During this time, PPUK have fought to create a dialogue around issues that are core to how people live in the modern age.

Over the next 4 weeks Pirate Party UK will be running a series of blogs, posters, podcasts and videos looking back over the last 6 years of UK political and Pirate history in detail, as well as looking ahead to the next 6. This includes raising the funds we need to make it all happen through a Crowdfunder at http://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/WeArrSix


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  • (Score: 2) by zafiro17 on Sunday August 02 2015, @05:55PM

    by zafiro17 (234) on Sunday August 02 2015, @05:55PM (#217050) Homepage

    Not trying to be a dick here (I don't have to try: it comes naturally, ha ha). But serious question for discussion: OK, the Pirate Party has existed for six years now. What have we gained as a result of it? Yes, they've campaigned. But other than raising awareness of our God-given right to free entertainment, have we really changed anything in the way modern society operates?

    Again, not trying to be incendiary here: I'd really like to know and don't want to have to wait for their powerpoints in the undetermined-future.

    --
    Dad always thought laughter was the best medicine, which I guess is why several of us died of tuberculosis - Jack Handey
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  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by Andy_R on Sunday August 02 2015, @07:55PM

    by Andy_R (3855) on Sunday August 02 2015, @07:55PM (#217090)

    That's a fair question. We haven't won any elections, and with the UK's first-past-the-post system, we're not likely to any time in the near future. One thing we have achieved is hard to measure - political influence. When the government says it's planning to do dumb things to do with technology, we put the opposing view across in the media, by lobbying, by submitting consultation responses that are well respected and well informed, and by meeting with MPs who know us from campaigns as sensible, clever people who really know our stuff. Even I'll probably never be 100% sure about this, but I wouldn't be at all surprised if the reason the Digital Economy Act was quietly swept under the carpet a few years back and nobody ever had their net connection cut off despite that legislation passing with cross-part support is that I and a few others in the Pirate Party were able to set up meetings with the right MPs at the right time, and politely explain the actual consequences of going ahead.

    Beyond the UK, the people we have managed to get elected are very highly respected. The Pirate movement played a really big part in stopping ACTA, with Swedish Pirate MEP Amelia Andersdotter getting a near unanimous no vote on ACTA in the European Parliament. German Pirate MEP Julia Reda is likely to be the first politician to actually roll back any part of copyright at the EU level, while in Iceland their Pirate Party is leading the opinion polls, which is where I think the other thing we've achieved in the UK will prove more important - we've built a solid, functioning (if small) political party that has the capacity to expand when public opinion swings our way as it did over the Digital Economy Act and and ACTA.

    • (Score: 2) by zafiro17 on Sunday August 02 2015, @09:05PM

      by zafiro17 (234) on Sunday August 02 2015, @09:05PM (#217104) Homepage

      That's a great answer. Many thanks for it.

      --
      Dad always thought laughter was the best medicine, which I guess is why several of us died of tuberculosis - Jack Handey