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905 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 1411
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Title: HPR1411: ohmroep live 1, 31-06-2013, pirate parties
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr1411/hpr1411.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-18 01:03:13
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---
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All right.
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Good evening and welcome to Omrub Radio.
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This is Nidomedia reporting for Hacker Public Radio, Hacker Public Radio Live.
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Here at Omrub at 104.7 FM.
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I'm here in the studio with four other guests from different pirate parties.
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On the other side of me there is Fabrizio.
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Hello in the mic.
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Next to him I have from the Dutch Pirate Party I have the Sir Derek Poet.
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Hello.
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Next to him we have Jonas Draff from the Belgium Pirate Party.
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Hello, thanks for inviting me.
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And next to me is Thomas Gordon also from the Pirate Party Belgium
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and Helper in setting up the Antwerp chapter.
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Good afternoon.
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Welcome, I'm delighted to see you all here.
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And I wanted to talk today about the Pirate Party.
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So we start about the different Pirate Party started.
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Derek Poet, could you tell us a bit about the beginnings of the Dutch Pirate Party?
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The Dutch Pirate Party started around 2006 as an informal group of people
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meeting online and afterwards meeting AFK.
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And around 2009 it became a little bit more official.
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2010 all of a sudden we were confronted with elections in Holland.
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And then within two months the whole party was officially registered, officially started.
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So we basically have two starting points, 2006 and 2010 for the records.
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OK, well let's continue about the specifics in a moment.
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How about the Belgium Pirate Party?
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Jonas?
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Well, the Belgian Pirate Party started about the same time as a Dutch Pirate Party.
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We started in 2009 as a small informal group in Brussels.
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And we were waiting for elections in 2010 at the time.
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So we had plenty of time until our governments just stopped functioning.
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And there we were, we had two months to collect about 10,000 signatures all across Belgium.
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And yeah, we had major problems.
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We got to wrong documents from the government.
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The government didn't know how to add a new party to the system.
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And yeah, from there on we quickly grew.
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And now we're preparing for, we were preparing for the elections in 2012,
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which was a major boost for the party.
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And now we're preparing for 2014.
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All right, Thomas, do you have any comments about the Antwerp chapter?
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How it started?
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Well, basically the Antwerp chapter is a part of the Belgian Pirate Party.
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But I think what's most interesting is the general idea of starting a Pirate Party.
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What we didn't end where basically was come together with a couple of people
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and say, OK, we're now the local chapter of the Pirate Party.
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And I think in general, if you think about how it's starting,
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that's an interesting feature.
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The fact that everywhere in the world actually people just say, OK,
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we'll start a Pirate Party here.
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There's no real way of getting an official, you don't have to ask for permission to do it.
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We didn't ask for permission in Antwerp.
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And then basically what you usually do is you come into contact with other Pirate parties
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or other parts of the Pirate Party.
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In our case, we went from the local chapter, we obviously contacted the federal
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and we started engaging with the other groups, other cities,
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and people that were working on the federal level.
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So that's kind of like a miniature version of how it happens everywhere.
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Yes, Fabricio, can you confirm this for the Belgian or I'm sorry for the German
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and for the Brazil chapters?
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Yes, the Germany, I think, has started the same time a little before
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and already took part in the federal election in 2009.
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Missing it shortly, it made a little above 4%
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and missing the 5% necessary to join the parliament.
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And in 2011, first in Berlin in October, we got to 9.6%
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in the city council then.
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And after that, four more states joined in Germany,
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where we have a Pirate in the opposition there.
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The last one, but we lost there in Germany.
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So it's a very critical situation in the moment.
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We have in September the next elections again,
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where we needed to get the 5% but someone there.
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And regarding Brazil, Brazil is also since quite the beginning together,
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but it has a problem that's very difficult to become official party there.
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The guys have been struggling and trying and last year, finally,
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they have a new attempt, they made a general assembly
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where they make the internal organizational steps for that.
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But I think now they have to collect 500,000 signatures.
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But more than that, it's important.
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I think it's 20,000 years than put me fast in the number,
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but they have to publish the national program and the national newspapers
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and they have to pay for that.
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So that's something difficult to get a official party in Brazil.
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So the guys are organized.
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It's a very disentral and beautiful to see several cities have a party,
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parties organize it.
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They are very active.
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We can see on the Facebook.
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But to become official, there is a problem.
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If the by advertising space in the national newspapers and it's the first.
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You have to publish your program in the national official newspaper.
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So I have maybe a fun story about that.
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We did local elections last year and for Antwerp,
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while actually in Belgium, what happens is to be able to have a local party
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or to be in the elections with local party,
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you either have to collect signatures.
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And I think for it depends on the size of the city in Antwerp, it was like 10,000 maybe.
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But the other trick was to have a signature from somebody
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that was in the previous council.
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So if you had somebody that was elected before,
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they could just give you one autograph, one signature bang and he can be in the election.
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But the rules don't specify that they have to be from the same party.
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Because obviously what happens is that a lot of people were elected
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and then they start their own party and then they can do it with one signature.
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And then what we did, we contacted all of the council members of the previous year.
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And we said, hey, we want to participate in the elections.
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So one of you actually want to give us this signature.
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And in fact, two people did.
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So there were two council members that were quitting.
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They were kind of angry, I guess.
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And is it fine?
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I mean, they gave us a signature.
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And on top of that, we also did the 10,000 signatures just for fun.
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Oh, you guys were lucky.
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We had like one week to collect our signatures and we had to stand in every province in Holland
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in front of the province house.
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There's only one specific week when you can collect your signatures in Holland.
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And outside of the week, it's impossible.
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And it's middle of the holidays.
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And basically you're standing there an entire day.
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And at the end of the day, maybe they have your signature.
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You have to be in a specific spot too.
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Well, you have to be in a specific spot in the city because there's only one place in the city
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where you can have your, where people can sign for the, for the elections.
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And they have to have their identification with them.
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So there you're standing for the pirate party.
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Do you have identification with you?
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So you can already see how rules, electoral rules have an enormous impact on even the ability
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to join into an election.
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And that's actually quite interesting if you compare it between different countries.
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Well, the thing that they all have in common, what I see from here is that the political
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parties that are in power make it incredibly difficult for new people to join in.
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But if you're already in power, then they make it as easy as possible, that's the thing,
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yeah.
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Yes.
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Um, okay, um, let's see, well, there's, so it's pretty much, it always starts as an
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unofficial thing.
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And then later it gets to get official.
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How big was your unofficial group when you started up?
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Was it like five persons somewhere in a, in a hallway?
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It was like five people, just five people who met on the internet and said, like, oh,
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yeah, we could do this too.
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You know, and they just got together in Brussels and they said, yeah, okay, now we're the
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pirate party.
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And that's it.
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That's basically all you need to do.
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You need to say we're the pirate party.
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And from that point, the hard part is actually getting registered.
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So that's the signatures which you need to collect.
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And then for that, you need to gather as many people as you can to join the party and
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to really become a big organization.
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But I think the big challenge maybe even isn't the signatures and the logistics of being
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able to participate in the election.
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But it's a simple fact that you're basically being thrown in a room with all of these people
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that are interested in doing politics.
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Most of, well, usually none of whom have experienced in politics, all of whom have a very
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strong idea of how it should be done.
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And then so the biggest challenge actually is I think to get everybody to get along and
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kind of cooperate with each other and find a way of, I think that's, it's a way, way
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bigger challenge than getting the signatures.
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I mean, not in time and physical effort, but then I would say like mental and social
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effort for sure.
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You have to try to build an organization out of anarchists and that's always difficult.
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We've seen in Holland in the last century when the liberal party, they started out liberal,
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it took them 10 years to get a party together for exactly the same reason.
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They just, they didn't want the authority.
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That's also a mark that it's, I don't know how it is in you guys organizations, but in Belgium
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definitely there's an incredible anti-authoritarian vibe inside the pirate party, which results
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in oddly enough, like almost if somebody's acting like a leader, you know, you might get
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hated instantly.
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It's kind of, there's a kind of funny, funny thing that happens.
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So you know, every time we have to make decisions and you have to make sure that nobody comes
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out too strongly because then their heads go off.
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It's kind of, it's a bit of a theme, I guess.
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It's a, it's a challenging team that I think that everybody has and what, what, what, what
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we notice in Holland also during the elections, what is, for us a big problem is that every
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media organization in Holland has, for a long time for ages, been related to a political
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party and a church in, in the Netherlands.
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So all the media organizations have an affiliation already.
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And during the elections, they are trying to get their affiliated parties to fill as much
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of their airtime as possible.
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So when you're a new party and you don't have a media organization standing behind you
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like that, you also notice that you don't get any invitations for the televised debates,
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for the radio debates.
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It's all gone to the, the friends of the people that are already in the media.
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And that's, I think, was in Holland our, our, our biggest challenge.
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So we had the same thing, yeah.
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Yeah, so that, that's where social media kicks in, I guess, because social media should
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be a strong point of the parties that the media we could use as our media, like, like
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the media we are specialised in.
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Yeah.
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And when the time comes, a couple of years from now, when, when most voters will use mainly
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social media as their, as their most important communication tool, right now in Holland, most
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of the voters still watch what's on TV and if, if you're not on TV with the other political
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parties, they don't even know you, they don't know your participating.
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I have an experience now in polluted discussions.
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Because I'm a direct candidate in Berlin for the national election, where I share the
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stage with the candidates from the other party.
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And in several discussions, I could feel that I come much better than the others of the
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feedback from the public.
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And then the report from the journalists, the mass media, I was not mentioned.
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Right.
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So it was like big, huge paragraphs about the other candidates and about me was one
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line and nothing about content.
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So you see that sometimes the cards are played and this respected the media is really a tough
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number now because they do watch the main media, who is compromised.
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Yeah.
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So in Holland what we're doing now is we try to, to build as much report with the media
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during the, when it's not election time and you try to use that when it's, when it's
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election time to, to also get in.
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I actually was lucky yesterday because something very, very special happened yesterday and
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I think they're going to understand when I say this.
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It's the first time that I, that we've been called actively by the national television
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for an opinion on something.
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Yeah.
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And that's actually for us, it was like a major breakthrough.
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Keep in mind, we've been active since 2009, but it's the first time the journalist calls
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for an opinion.
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In this case, it was about Bradley Manning.
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That's not election related and they said, you know, who would know something about this?
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Those pirate guys and they call this and I think that's, you know, that's kind of the
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steps that you have to go through as well.
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And about the debates, the, the argument that they used for, to exclude us from certain
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debates was, well, you don't have any elect, people elected in, in the current council.
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You're like, okay, wait, you're only going to have debates with, with parties that already
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have an elected person.
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You don't see a problem with that.
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No, you know, you can't, see that's the other thing.
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You can't really fight with them because then they definitely will kick your ass.
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So it's kind of, it's, you have to be nice to people that aren't nice to you.
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That's the, the reality.
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Yes.
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Well, let's return to the, how did the parties get started, their quote.
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Could you tell us a bit about the very beginning of the Dutch pirate party, how many people
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and where, I personally wasn't there.
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I didn't join till 2009, but there were like six, six people and yeah, they just started
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out as friends who met online and were very worried about the direction that internet
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in Holland was going and from there, it started to grow, but it just started as a small
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bunch of people getting together and worrying about what was going on.
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Okay.
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Fabricio, do you have any comments for the, about the start and the, the way the bell
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German?
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No, yes, German, let's start with the German, yes.
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Oh, I heard that the German party started out of the Coscom computer club, mainly meeting
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in the C-base in Berlin, but I was not there.
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I moved to Berlin in 2010, not only.
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And what I noticed that the German, I think, was a, I think up to now one of the biggest
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breakthrough, no, there was the first breakthrough having two persons in the European Parliament
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from Sweden.
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And the Germans in Berlin, what I testified that it was a beautiful situation where I don't
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think more than 100 people got to almost 10% of the vote in Berlin, was a small number
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of people very engaged, worked, very intelligent and made it.
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Also lots of planning, like we see the German mentality of really working properly and
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hard.
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That also you see that your German party's also doing that and was a beautiful thing to
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see during the elections how they all managed and like all the other parties have companies
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to put their posters on the road.
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And those companies, or most of them, they are paid for the job.
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And when you could put the poster was raining the first weekend and the parties running under
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the rain took the best place.
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And so that was a kind of way that it was a very positive experience to see a few people
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working harder and getting this 9.6%.
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And they spread it as a wave in Germany, that other three other Parliament's also got
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pirates into it.
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Yes, they also got the other local chapters running.
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And can you give us a bit of background about the very beginning of the Brazil chapter?
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Well, it's not official one of the vivid information that I know.
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First there was the World Social Forum, one or two in 2003, where a Brazilian guy present
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a paper on liquid democracy, together from the American guy.
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And that said is one of the births of liquid democracy, like officially.
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Nothing to do with the Pirate Party at that time, but the ideas were already in Brazil.
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And I know that in the first meetings of Pirate Party International, there was someone from
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Brazil already into it.
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I remember in 2010 when I helped Brazil, there was two Pirate parties group and a big issue
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because every time a group would put a website to be attacked from the other.
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The Pirate Party Brazil was already hosted for instance in Sweden and was expelled from
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there because whatever the Pirate Party Brazil would put their website, there were de-attacks.
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And so no servers would like to host the Pirate Party.
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And that comes out of a story of two groups there that I have the pleasure to go to know
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both of them and kind of mediate together and understand the frictions.
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And that was a part of the history of Pirate Party Brazil.
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It's interesting to notice it, but because we had in Spain and other countries this kind
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of situation where a group of people, very well-intentioned, occupy the Pirate Party name.
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And who are we from outside or who is the PPI to say who are the real Pirate Party?
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That was a part of the Brazilian Pirate Party story because we had two Pirate parties.
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Spain has the same problem.
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In Spain it's maybe even worse because what happened there is that you have the Pirate Party
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Catalonia, but of course in Spain there's already a discussion about Catalonia, about independence,
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that sort of thing.
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And as far as I know, it's still the case that you have the Spanish Pirate Party, you have
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the Catalonian Pirate Party and they kind of work alongside with each other.
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I guess they try not to fight too much, but what happens?
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But there is no such thing as a Pirate Party that represents the whole of Spain that doesn't
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exist, for example.
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I think in Belgium, that's kind of a very interesting case study as well because in Belgium
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we have a federalised state and all of the political parties have split in Belgium, except
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for maybe one.
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The communist party, but even there, it's different.
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So all of the socialists, the Democrats, all those parties they split into a Dutch speaking
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and a French speaking part, even though we still have federal elections and we have a
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country, and that has very, very strange effects on everything from debates to media to...
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But I think that the weirdest part about it is how we deal with it internally.
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Because internally we try to have one party for a whole of Belgium, but externally nobody
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cares.
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Everybody ignores the French speaking part of the Pirate Party Belgium if you're in the
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Dutch speaking press and vice versa.
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They will never invite somebody from the other side of the country, even though for us
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is the same party.
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So it's kind of weird, I guess.
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Yeah, I remember going to the press once and the co-president, who spoke French, was
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with me.
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And the journalist just said, oh, wait, no, no, please don't go into the camera, just the
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Dutch part of the story, please.
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So that's really the way it is, that's how it goes in Belgium.
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Yeah.
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I think it's a very nice thing to look into that because you have in the microcosm Belgian
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and international issue there.
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I'm facing some examples between Brazil and Germany that are beautiful to see, that the
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German Pirate Party voting should Brazilian issues has to do with Germany.
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The one was the export of an atomic nuclear plant from Germany in a technology that's
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not allowed in Germany anymore.
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The president government bought it and the German is giving financial support to it.
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So it's an ethical issue when the government does not allow something to be built in
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that country and exports to another.
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And so the German Pirates voted, there was some involvement of Brazilian pirates into
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it.
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The very issue was the German Pirates voting about solidarity to the indigenous tribes
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in Brazil.
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So that shows a point where the geopolitical borders are not that important.
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But what is when inside the country already have it?
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So you have a beautiful opportunity to solve some problems that would be an example for others
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outside.
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A person I would rather not have to deal with all that, but okay.
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Have you guys, has there ever been any discussion in Belgium about two Pirate parties?
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Yeah, definitely.
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The big problem with that is that it's perceived as Flemish nationalism by most people.
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So you know there's a big problem with nationalism in Belgium, specifically Flemish nationalism.
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And there's a bunch of Flemish parties that basically want to split Belgium.
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There's at least two big ones, but that's a lot.
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I mean, they take 35, 40% in elections.
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And so the problem is if even within the Pirate party Belgium, if you were to suggest that,
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you'll basically be branded a Flemish nationalist, and I know because it happened to me.
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Because even if you say, well, maybe we should have two press teams because the press doesn't
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care anyway, then a lot of it's become less people have become a little bit more realistic
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about it, but especially like last year, there was like a lot of friction.
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And especially a lot of misunderstanding about the strategy involved.
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So I think what we're doing now is we're just trying to do our best to be a Belgian party
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because it seems like most people actually want that.
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And we just take the bad with it, you know, so we translate stuff and that sort of thing.
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Well, it sounds like the Pirate way of doing it, like not splitting up and just doing it
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the way.
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No, that's interesting.
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I don't know what the Pirate way would be.
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I think an extra plus point that you have there is that all the other parties have to split
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up their finances for the elections.
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Socialists have to put the money for the elections down twice.
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Pirate party only has to do it once.
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So in that case, you have a big advantage over the traditional split parties.
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I guess I've never thought of it like that, but that's an interesting point.
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OK, we're about 24 minutes into the show right now.
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I'm here with some guests from different pirate parties.
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We have been discussing about how the different party, pirate parties got started.
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And I would like to continue to the subject of what actually is a pirate party.
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Fabrizio, you already mentioned a subject called Liquid Democracy.
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Perhaps it's a good idea to go into that a bit further, but we continue this discussion.
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Yes, well, I'm a almost analog pirate.
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I must say, I'm very not the most adequate person, I think, to report.
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But from my understanding, the Liquid Democracy offers the possibility of participation.
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And that was a big part of what called me into the pirate party to voice as a minority.
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I'm a member of a minority in Germany.
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I'm a migrant that I could raise my voice, and it would be heard and accepted.
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And I could contribute to a formation of a program for a party that was towards the Liquid Democracy.
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It makes a big difference for me to be into the politics.
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And I think that is the main, let's say, USB, what they call in the pirate party.
|
|
But at the moment, as I feel, is also a platform for horizontal decision-making
|
|
or a possibility of changing the way of politics are done.
|
|
It's not only Liquid Democracy, there is a possibility to offer a vision,
|
|
a new way for politics.
|
|
That's what fascinates me in the pirate party.
|
|
And the Liquid Democracy is a way of executing it.
|
|
But I would like very much to share this question around here.
|
|
Liquid Democracy, I think, is a very typical pirate party thing.
|
|
And the way in Holland, we used to say this, in Holland, politics are ruled by the lobbyists.
|
|
And by switching to Liquid Feedback, you can take away the power from the view and give it to the many.
|
|
And that, I think, is a key part of pirate party politics.
|
|
You have to...
|
|
What's happening?
|
|
Okay.
|
|
All is food.
|
|
That was the NSA.
|
|
We just got interrupted because I have some very important guests here for everyone who just got in.
|
|
I'm a new media here with the Republic Radio.
|
|
I have here, one, two, three, four guests.
|
|
I have a direct vote from the pirate party Netherlands.
|
|
I have a bridge show from the Pirate Party International, Germany is Brazil.
|
|
And from the Pirate Party Belgium, I have two guests.
|
|
I have Thomas Jordan and Jonas the Graf.
|
|
And right now we're talking about the subject of what is a pirate party.
|
|
And we had some root interruptions when the vote was saying something.
|
|
So please continue.
|
|
That was Liquid Democracy.
|
|
And then, for rest, I think, yeah, of course, the absolute declaration.
|
|
What I really like is how pirate parties worldwide are all banning together to fight patents,
|
|
to modernize copyright and to work for an open government.
|
|
And when the whole act, I think, was going on.
|
|
You saw how national parties were all being split up by lobbyists.
|
|
And the pirate parties worldwide were all speaking with the same voice and going for the same problem.
|
|
And in that thing, I think the pirate party is a new generation of parties,
|
|
where problems are looked at globally and talked about globally.
|
|
And everybody has a chance to participate.
|
|
I've actually, this is my pet subject.
|
|
For this week, at least, because I've been doing quite a lot of thinking about what the pirate party is actually about.
|
|
And I've come sort of to my own conclusion.
|
|
And I know it's, I mean, every pirate you talk to will answer something different, maybe.
|
|
But I think what 90% or 80% to 90% of the topics that the pirate party is talking about concern information.
|
|
Actually, they concern access to information.
|
|
Who has access?
|
|
Who is allowed to collect information?
|
|
Who is allowed to use it?
|
|
Who can interrupt those kind of things.
|
|
And that actually splits up in the whole range of political issues,
|
|
going from government transparency, where we want the government to actually give us more information,
|
|
protection of privacy, where we want to actually protect the access to our private information.
|
|
We have things like censorship, which is a very, and it keeps going like that.
|
|
If you think about patent law, it's actually the access to an idea to information.
|
|
Copyright.
|
|
All the way.
|
|
It's a control issue.
|
|
So, if you extrapolate that historically, you can think about the fact that a lot of people say
|
|
we're going into information age.
|
|
You know, we came from the industrial age, and now we're going into an information age,
|
|
where a lot of people are working with information with data on computers.
|
|
A lot of our, you know, agriculture stuff that's all been automized.
|
|
And we're basically doing stuff with our brains, almost all of us, especially in Holland, Belgium, most of Europe.
|
|
And so, it's a control issue of how we want to handle that.
|
|
What kind of society we want to have, and how we want to deal with all that information,
|
|
and those pathways of information.
|
|
And so, if I can pick into this, is that we just entered the 21st century,
|
|
and what we notice now is that, due to new technology, we have bigger improvements,
|
|
and the way we can crunch information.
|
|
Now, we have the possibility to actually use new voting systems, for instance,
|
|
because, like, one, two centuries ago, people couldn't use actual democratic systems.
|
|
There just wasn't the power to deal with all that new information.
|
|
But now, we have these information crunching technologies, and it becomes an issue,
|
|
the same with government, transparency.
|
|
One century ago, nobody had the power to check what the government was doing.
|
|
The government is too big to do something like that.
|
|
Now, we have the technology to do something like that.
|
|
So, if you give me the information, I just crunch the data, and I'll tell you where something is going wrong.
|
|
So, then the big question is, how do you decide on what's good, what's right,
|
|
what should we be able to do with information, who should have access, who doesn't?
|
|
And then, it's not that we just think about information, but we think in a very specific way.
|
|
And I think, historically, we're descendant from basically the age of enlightenment.
|
|
If you think about the origin of liberalism and those things, it basically is about a few things.
|
|
Mostly, it's about freedom and equality.
|
|
Those are driving factors in, let's say, the moral reasoning behind our prior programs.
|
|
What you could say is that we look at a political issue that concerns information,
|
|
and then we look what the best way to handle it would be that ensures the most freedom
|
|
for the most amount of people and the best equality between people,
|
|
even if you're a minority or anything else.
|
|
And so, we're, in a certain sense, we're applying a moral reasoning.
|
|
It's called humanism.
|
|
Basically, we're applying humanist moral reasoning, very technical, to information policy.
|
|
And I often compare it to the way that humanism was applied to the industrial age.
|
|
If you think about the origin of socialism and communism, they said,
|
|
well, you know, you have these big factories, but they should be, you know,
|
|
we should distribute this in a more fair way, more equal, more freedom for people.
|
|
We can't enslave people to work.
|
|
And basically, I think, personally, that the pirate party is about applying the same kind of thinking to the information age.
|
|
And we have to do it because obviously the other parties, and especially the older parties,
|
|
have no clue what they're doing on that level, or at least don't have a framework that's consistent.
|
|
And I think, in a lot of cases, they don't have a framework that's morally right, either.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
That was quite a bit of...
|
|
Yeah, no, you're right.
|
|
That's quite a story, but let's continue.
|
|
Let's return to what is a pirate party.
|
|
What was the country, again, some earlier, where there were two different pirate parties?
|
|
Spain. Spain.
|
|
Spain.
|
|
Italy, I believe.
|
|
Apparently, there's more.
|
|
But how can such a situation exist?
|
|
Where does it come from?
|
|
Not only where there is.
|
|
Like, I see from Germany else, the between the Norfolk, Berlin parades,
|
|
and the Bayern mentioned in a different population, different values, different wishes.
|
|
Do you feel good to get together and have a common opinion?
|
|
I think the main reason for that is that the pirate party is bottom up.
|
|
It means that any three guys, or maybe one guy can sit in the room and say,
|
|
I'm going to start my own pirate party.
|
|
In itself, you can call yourself a political party whenever you want.
|
|
Anybody can do that.
|
|
Of course, the difficulty is the logistical difficulty of entering elections.
|
|
And even there, local elections, you don't have to belong to a large party to participate in a local election.
|
|
But the reality is that the difficulty of participating in bigger and bigger elections requires a larger and larger organization.
|
|
So for us, we do bottom up, and then we start working together because we have to.
|
|
In certain cases, like in Catalonia, for a lot of the activities,
|
|
they just don't have to work together, which doesn't give them a driving force to do something together.
|
|
In the same way that maybe the Netherlands is working quite separately from the pirate party Belgium.
|
|
We don't really do things together yet.
|
|
But we don't have to because we have different elections.
|
|
So it doesn't really matter if we worked well.
|
|
It would be nice to work together.
|
|
But on a lot of levels, it just doesn't matter.
|
|
A lot of other parties, I would say, work the other way around.
|
|
There's like this one guy or a couple of guys that say,
|
|
you know, we've got this political party.
|
|
And if you want to have a local chapter, you're going to have to talk to us, boy.
|
|
And so they put you what they call in line with the party.
|
|
And for us, it's different.
|
|
It's kind of like what the pirate party is.
|
|
Is the result of all these singular actions.
|
|
It's kind of like a chaotic system.
|
|
But obviously something emerges.
|
|
That's the pirate party.
|
|
And it's very different from a design system where somebody goes in and says,
|
|
now we're going to do a political party.
|
|
And you all have to do it the way I think it should be done.
|
|
There's one thing maybe to add another view on that.
|
|
But you're saying the beginning that we don't like to have the figure is guiding it.
|
|
And if you see a bottom up, I would suggest the pirate parts are trying to do a bottom bottom.
|
|
There is no up.
|
|
That happens that some people get into the position that get always in trouble.
|
|
But our vision is a bottom a bottom.
|
|
Well, yeah, except for the problem, which is a real problem in the pirate party,
|
|
we have to have candidates because that's how the bleeding elections work.
|
|
And this is actually a big, this is major trouble in the pirate party because you have to make lists.
|
|
And then somebody has to be the first guy on the list.
|
|
And then all the media jumps in and they only interview the first guy.
|
|
And so that's for us, it's actually counter to how everybody wants to work.
|
|
But the external forces for make us work that way.
|
|
You have to act like a traditional political party in some respects in order to participate in the whole circus.
|
|
But we have the same thing in Holland.
|
|
Once you're the number one on the list for the elections, everybody starts calling you party leader.
|
|
Whereas as far as I'm concerned, we're like a leaderless revolution.
|
|
So I always said, no, I'm not a party leader.
|
|
I'm just a party spokesperson.
|
|
I'm the voice of the party right now, but anyone can be that.
|
|
I remember having heard in the last one year ago, the PPI general assembly, there was someone from Syria, I think,
|
|
telling about his experience, experience of the pirate party and they have a rule there.
|
|
At the moment that someone complains, this person gets the job.
|
|
And they were very flexible and very motivated, changing a lot.
|
|
And I wish sometimes a two in Germany would be more like that.
|
|
But I see some positive things in Germany.
|
|
Like in the last list, we had a group.
|
|
Hello, echo.
|
|
What is this?
|
|
Somebody broke into your program.
|
|
What is?
|
|
We are being hacked.
|
|
We're this is hacker public radio.
|
|
That was not me.
|
|
I don't know from the pirate party here.
|
|
And probably there are some other political parties who really want to disrupt our show or something.
|
|
And then it happens to have had some success.
|
|
Luckily, a year ago, I would have said a pair of noise.
|
|
But you know, I don't know this year.
|
|
Well, let's back what I was saying.
|
|
There is in our election, we have the three monkeys had concept in one of the group.
|
|
If one of them gets elected, the other two share the money.
|
|
I have in my candidature someone else that would work with me and we would split the money and the function.
|
|
So you're trying with a small step to show other possibilities on that.
|
|
Oh, I don't know.
|
|
I keep telling stories.
|
|
I guess one thing we tried in Antwerp, another idea, was that anybody who wanted to be a candidate had to sign sort of.
|
|
It's kind of like when you become a doctor, you have to do this oath, the Hippocratic oath.
|
|
And it basically says how you should act as a doctor.
|
|
Like, you know, what kind of responsibilities you have in this and that.
|
|
And so we wrote basically the same kind of oath, but then for a politician.
|
|
Like what you're supposed to do as a politician, if you get elected, it has all these things in there.
|
|
Like you're not actually supposed to just promote your own point of view, but you have to consult and you have to do this and that.
|
|
And so we do all these experiments with politics really with new ways of I would say subverting the current system because that's the thing right.
|
|
The pirate party has chosen to participate in elections.
|
|
We're not an activist group.
|
|
We're a political party.
|
|
So we chose to be in each country.
|
|
We tried to be in the elections. That's a goal of it.
|
|
Which means you have to follow the rules, but obviously we're trying to find the holes in the rules constantly.
|
|
So we can actually change it in the way that we want politics to run.
|
|
And we're not a purely political party, of course.
|
|
We're an activist party.
|
|
In that respect, we're also different from a lot of other parties.
|
|
See, for example, with the Bradley Manning case, most of the traditional parties say, well, that is something that's being looked at by a judge.
|
|
And we as a party cannot say anything about that as long as a judge is looking at it.
|
|
But we're an activist party.
|
|
We want to change things.
|
|
And we start calling out that judge right from the beginning of the trial.
|
|
And we keep on calling through the beginning of the trial.
|
|
We had the same thing in Holland with an organization called Brein, which is the Dutch part of the copyright police.
|
|
We've been actively fighting them.
|
|
We've started a proxy service in the Netherlands.
|
|
We've done stuff that goes way beyond purely political stuff just in order to make our point.
|
|
So I think a pirate party in that respect is it is a bunch of activists that pretend to be politicians in order to change the political landscape.
|
|
That's why I see you.
|
|
To the political system, I would say.
|
|
And one more thing that I just thought that we were talking about the cooperation internationally.
|
|
I think there's more cooperation than you'd say, but it's not forced into a party line.
|
|
For example, we copied the liquid feedback system from Germany.
|
|
That's true.
|
|
Now, we're working together with New Zealand in order to come up with a different version of the liquid feedback system.
|
|
We had a lot of trouble designing our website.
|
|
So in the end, well, we just copied the German website.
|
|
And in that respect, I think the pirate parties are working together a lot.
|
|
But without that party line that you mentioned, it's more helping meetings or we don't do that.
|
|
No, it's helping each other out to get to get ahead without trying to force each other to do things against our gut.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
But I personally think an interesting problem with the pirate party, especially the hacker community, since we're here anyway, is that I often hear this comment.
|
|
A lot of people are disappointed in politics, like really badly.
|
|
If you look at the numbers, politicians is the least trusted profession on earth.
|
|
Really, it's the absolute bottom journalist, just one position above it.
|
|
But think about how bad that is.
|
|
It just shows us that the most powerful people are the least trusted people that we have.
|
|
It's really, really, really societal problem.
|
|
What I notice is that by saying, hey, guys, we're going to participate in politics.
|
|
So we have to have candidates and all that.
|
|
Then we get judged by a lot of people in the hacker community as a political party.
|
|
And I do think that's kind of like a problem that I'd love the hacker community as a whole to get over.
|
|
Yes, we have to act like a political party in certain sense, because otherwise we just can't participate in the elections.
|
|
But you guys have to help us.
|
|
Even if you don't like politics, it's too important to ignore and to just dismiss.
|
|
It's a general thing.
|
|
And even internally, I find it sometimes very weird that we have anti-political people in the pirate party.
|
|
I'm like, well, I don't know.
|
|
You know the feeling?
|
|
Yeah, but if you've been very disappointed in politics, but feel something should change in politics,
|
|
then a pirate party might be a way to work on the future again.
|
|
Except when something looks like regular politics, then the panic, which I don't think you should always do.
|
|
Yes, I think we should be vigilant and make sure that we don't become a traditional party.
|
|
It's obviously a risk.
|
|
But we aren't.
|
|
None of the pirate parties I can remotely consider to be a classical political party, but you get blamed for it anyway.
|
|
But those are the money shots on TV as well.
|
|
I saw the German elections.
|
|
They had like five, six very stiff, suited up German politicians.
|
|
And then you had the one guy from the pirate party just in a t-shirt.
|
|
But in the end, he got everybody on arguments.
|
|
The t-shirts go straight through the stuffed suits.
|
|
And we added in Holland as well, during the elections, you put there together with a very old school politician.
|
|
And just by being there, not wearing your tie and just wearing a t-shirt and having a completely different way of looking at things and expressing yourself,
|
|
you're showing people already that there's a very big difference between a pirate party politician and a regular politician.
|
|
Okay. Meanwhile, we're joined with a new guest, which is Christophart.
|
|
Nice to introduce yourself.
|
|
Yeah, I'm one of the five heads of the Austrian pirate party.
|
|
We don't have one person at the top, but five with equal rights.
|
|
And I just heard you on the radio over in our Austrian camp, and I thought,
|
|
hey, I'm going to find where you are.
|
|
And it took me a while, but so I don't really know what you've been talking about.
|
|
It sounds like a mafia movie, the five heads.
|
|
Oh, yeah.
|
|
We decided earlier. I heard you're talking about people here now.
|
|
I heard you're talking about not wanting to have one candidate at the top.
|
|
And so we said we also want to have one leader at the top.
|
|
Yeah. All right.
|
|
We started out with a bit about how the pirate party started.
|
|
And now we're talking about the subject of what is a pirate party.
|
|
Perhaps you want to talk a bit about the start of your pirate party?
|
|
The Austrian one was founded in 2006, I think, very soon after the Swedish one.
|
|
But it stayed very small for many years.
|
|
And only recently, due in a large part to the success in Germany,
|
|
suddenly about a year ago, a year and a half ago,
|
|
the Austrian pirates started showing up in opinion polls,
|
|
even though they were really, really tiny.
|
|
And then the people involved were, as individuals, very unknown.
|
|
And that caused a lot of people to get interested in the party again and join
|
|
and see that there's actually a chance there.
|
|
And now we have national elections coming up in three months, I think.
|
|
End of September.
|
|
And we're polling at 2%, and we are just in the process of collecting signatures
|
|
to be able to stand for elections.
|
|
We have about 85% of the ones we need collected,
|
|
and are probably going to be on the ballot in eight out of nine Austrian provinces.
|
|
So that's a big step for us.
|
|
That's a threshold.
|
|
It's 2,600 signatures, but you have to sign at your local government building
|
|
in front of people there.
|
|
You can't send it in by email or do it on the net or something.
|
|
So it's been a struggle.
|
|
We've worked now for three weeks collecting these signatures,
|
|
but we're very close to the goal.
|
|
And that's for us a huge step because the Austrian pirates have never stood for national elections.
|
|
What percentage of the votes do you need to get?
|
|
Let's actually get 4% to enter parliament.
|
|
So we have to have now.
|
|
In the polls, yes.
|
|
But if you reach 1%, nationwide, you get funding.
|
|
So 1% is a funding threshold.
|
|
How about the polls in Austria?
|
|
Because we have a feeling now in Germany, we have like 2%, 3%.
|
|
But for now, I know the polls are then only on the baseline.
|
|
How you say in landline?
|
|
Landlines, not mobiles.
|
|
It's a different public.
|
|
Elders.
|
|
And I don't want to talk about conspiracy.
|
|
But I hear that the media really decides this week, SPD 23.
|
|
And find out how it will come out.
|
|
Well, yeah, that is one issue.
|
|
I think another issue is just that the sample sizes for these polls, at least in Austria,
|
|
that is 400 people.
|
|
It's really, really small.
|
|
If you're at a 2% party, that's what 8 people in the polls said,
|
|
Pirate Party, that can vary wildly.
|
|
So you can't make it serious as large.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
I see that's a huge problem for us in Germany that are running for election that we are by 2%,
|
|
3% and the 2, 2 years ago in 2011, it was like this.
|
|
Some weeks before the election, we were not on the cake share in there.
|
|
We could not see us.
|
|
We are not 4%.
|
|
And then suddenly we get 9.6%.
|
|
But the polls are a political instrument.
|
|
Do you realize that, right?
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
The polls are not, you know, to inform the public.
|
|
The polls are there to manipulate the public.
|
|
That's quite obvious.
|
|
There's been publications enough about this that basically show how easy it is to do it in a way
|
|
that is beneficial for certain, you know, and to have the story going.
|
|
But I do think, I mean, I'm not completely cynical in the sense that I don't think that all
|
|
media is bought.
|
|
So the way I approach it is like, you kind of have to get your story going in the,
|
|
because the media does love like an underdog.
|
|
And, you know, and I think as a beginning party, you have to try to get the underdog going
|
|
about you.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
And then then grow, you know.
|
|
But the problem is, that happened in Germany.
|
|
First, they were like the underdog and then wow, they're the surprise winners and they're up
|
|
and they were growing in the polls.
|
|
And then you started all these, you start seeing all these bad stories in the press,
|
|
which is not a coincidence, because the press is like, oh, now the hero has to fall.
|
|
But, you know, it's all something we've seen in Holland over the last, I think, 15, 20 years.
|
|
And we have a lot of new political parties coming into the spectrum.
|
|
And they start out very idealistic.
|
|
And all of a sudden they become huge.
|
|
And then everybody and his brother becomes a member of that party.
|
|
And all of a sudden that party is hijacked by 20 different groups of people within a year after the elections.
|
|
They're falling on the street, fighting and the party breaks up.
|
|
So we've been very conscious not to grow too fast, because that's something we definitely do not want to have happen.
|
|
We've grown very slowly organically, then all of a sudden explode.
|
|
And a year later you opened the door and you see who did we all invite in.
|
|
Yeah, that already happens.
|
|
I think sometimes you go like, you know, you can't really screen people that come into your party.
|
|
You can't say, well, where's your CV, man?
|
|
So you run the risk as a small starting party of getting a lot of disenfranchised people from other parties into your party.
|
|
I'd like to suggest when you show maybe for the people who are listening and do not know how it works, the part party.
|
|
If you could give me some hints, how is the part mandate by you?
|
|
How is the, because I see one of the main thing at the part party, it can work very well.
|
|
If the people are independent, proactive, constructive, it can get really massive.
|
|
Some people has too much time to complain and find problems on the others.
|
|
So for people who are outside that are not pirates, which the attitude that you would like to see?
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Well, definitely the go get attitude.
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I mean, the attitude of waiting and sitting back until something goes wrong and then shouting about it,
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that's definitely not an attitude you need in the pyro party.
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What I really like is the concept of adhocracy.
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Adhocracy is basically whoever does it first does it.
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So it kind of like OHM is or OM is itself, you know, you're kind of like okay,
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if you feel like there should be a lamp here, you know, hang a lamp.
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And if you augment that with the Brazilian rule, that if you have a critic on something that immediately you,
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then you hang the lamp.
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That happens here.
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Hey, that doesn't work. Go fix it.
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Go fix it.
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Yeah, so I think it's quintessential hacker culture in a political structure really, which is nice.
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It gets you have to get used to it too.
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Because some people just don't, they come from maybe they have experience in other organizations where it's much more classical.
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Or some people, well, I think what mostly happens is that people have very specific idea of how it's something.
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And usually their idea is very big and very ambitious and they can't do it alone.
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And then you get it because the by definition in an adhocracy, everything has to be attainable by one or two or three people.
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If you can't do it by yourself, well, you already have a problem, right?
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It's like we should all, you know, sentences that start like that are like a big warning sign, I guess.
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Okay, we have about four minutes left.
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So how about we take some time or eight minutes?
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Yeah, there's some.
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Okay, we have about eight minutes left.
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So let's do one more commercial.
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Let's do one or something.
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We're talking about the dig pot.
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|
I would like to ask you about the upslide and maybe after that, we can all say how to reach your local pirate party.
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Oh God, do we know that?
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Yeah, we need signatures in the Belgian hackerspace village signatures for next election.
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Hey, I have a local phone number.
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Do you dare say it on the radio?
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Sure.
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Sure, it's four six six seven, but it only works when you're on four six six seven babies.
|
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Ladies and gentlemen, if you want to have a coffee with a pirate, I didn't quite get your question.
|
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What did you do?
|
|
Well, earlier, you mentioned the upslide declaration.
|
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Yeah.
|
|
Could you go into what that means?
|
|
Basically, it's, it's, it's, it's what the all pirate parties in the world agree on as, as, as are the, the, the three main points that they should strive for and all.
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Every part of the pirate party is free to add other points.
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Those points are an open government that you can control instead of a control government and controls you.
|
|
Abandoning patents and changing copyright.
|
|
And those are the three main points that come from, yeah.
|
|
Well, interestingly enough, the BPI has just voted a new manifesto.
|
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And it now includes net neutrality as well.
|
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It has a clause on whistle blowing.
|
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There's a few new things and actually direct democracy is in there in a certain way as well.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Yeah. Now, I don't know if all the pirate parties have signed it yet, but it's quite interesting.
|
|
It's a major step because our, what you mentioned is actually like last week's.
|
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I'm just kidding.
|
|
It's so important.
|
|
Let's, let's, let's hope that that the newer, the new thing gets, gets approved.
|
|
I think it has been.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Yeah, I think at least nine countries have signed it, but I, I don't know how many have now, but it was happening in.
|
|
I guess in Poland, right?
|
|
Yeah, washer with the representatives are in washer right now.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
So that's good news.
|
|
You can probably look it up soon.
|
|
All right.
|
|
So in the final minutes, say we have some listeners who are interested in the pirate party and they are anywhere on the globe.
|
|
What would you recommend they do to get involved?
|
|
Start.
|
|
Do it.
|
|
Just, just go ahead, take the concept and do it.
|
|
Make your own pirate party or find the pirate party nearby and do it.
|
|
That's the most important thing.
|
|
Find a couple of friends in your, in your neighborhood, in your, in your university, in your local bar, and just start a local pirate party and, and grow.
|
|
We accept pull requests, by the way, for the gigs among us.
|
|
No.
|
|
Yeah, thanks for the opportunity to be here also for organizing it and enjoy it and join the pirate party who wants to change the politics.
|
|
Yeah.
|
|
Okay.
|
|
Thank you.
|
|
You do.
|
|
Thanks also for the brief chance.
|
|
I just like to emphasize one point, which is European corporation of pirate parties.
|
|
I think there's too little of that going on and I hope maybe if all of us are together here, we can discuss briefly how to, how to.
|
|
Deepen that because all the threats that we face are not national threats, but global threats and we need a global movement to counter them.
|
|
I think we should have like an informal pirate meeting here.
|
|
Well, we'll set up a pirate beer or a little pirate beer at home.
|
|
No, it's, I think that you're absolutely definitely right there.
|
|
That for me is, as always, been one of the main, main points of a pirate party is that it's an international organization of people from all over the world who.
|
|
Want the same things and who try to bypass their existing political elected officials because they haven't got a clue about it.
|
|
So I think that it's extremely important that in 2014 when we have the European elections, there's one united front of European pirate standing there.
|
|
I actually have the feeling that maybe that's a bit of good news.
|
|
I know that the last couple of years, especially in PPI and organization like that, it's been a struggle.
|
|
It really has been a struggle, but personally, I have the feeling that it's starting to get really a lot better.
|
|
I'm thinking like things like the manifesto and we're just getting more experience with how to do it on an international level.
|
|
And that's my personal experience in the pirate party in general is that sometimes you really just have to be patient and optimistic at the same time.
|
|
And just allow it to grow by itself.
|
|
I don't think we can force it to go faster than it's going right now, but it's going in the right direction.
|
|
And there's a deadline and that line's always worth magic.
|
|
I love the sound they make when they come flying by.
|
|
Yeah, the most of the pirate parties, the official part was right before the election if I'm not mistaken.
|
|
So you mentioned an informal meetup.
|
|
Should we just tell people to search the only key for pirate party and we will put something up that tells you when and where.
|
|
If you like, we can do it right after this.
|
|
We can just go to the other tent on the other side and then we'll have a meeting with ourselves there.
|
|
I think it is a good idea to have that.
|
|
You want more or less like pirate party somewhere else.
|
|
First, we would need to pick up my kid at four from the child activity.
|
|
The same way.
|
|
Well, we have some time left, so we need a location.
|
|
Where do we have a location?
|
|
Well, I guess the Belgian pirate party has a tent.
|
|
No, no, no, the Belgian village.
|
|
The Belgian village.
|
|
I guess we could do it there.
|
|
We have a bar and Belgian beer.
|
|
I have a Belgian beer with a CC license from Germany.
|
|
Belgian beer from Germany.
|
|
So that's settled in.
|
|
We'll look at the agenda.
|
|
We'll tell you guys.
|
|
Can't we now say like tomorrow be there at some time?
|
|
Sure.
|
|
What do you have time to do this?
|
|
Don't you think?
|
|
I have a kid.
|
|
Evening.
|
|
8 p.m.
|
|
All right.
|
|
There we have it.
|
|
We're still looking to participate with the pirate party.
|
|
Be at the Belgian village at 8 tomorrow.
|
|
It's the red tent with the white...
|
|
What should we call it?
|
|
A roof.
|
|
Yes, it's a white roof.
|
|
Bring your own parrot.
|
|
Bring your own parrot.
|
|
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