Updated 25/11/10
Well the dumb-asses went and did it. MEPs passed a resolution effectively approving the ACTA with 331 votes in favour, 294 against, and 11 abstentions.
Sovereignty. It is one of those rights that you are born with, that supposedly no-one can take away from you.
Yet our politicians over the centuries have stolen that from us, by forcing your registration with the state at birth they own you and assume your sovereignty as their own to do with as they see fit, registrations for your property means they lay ultimate claim to it, and through licensing control most things you do upto and including registering your demise when they again strip you with taxes.
They who no longer govern but rule over us, having stolen your sovereignty are but traitors, acting for their 30 pieces of silver, signing it away to a supranational body, the EU.
For their part, the unelected EU, having bribed, cheated and lied to accumulate this sovereignty, now wield their laws over us, abuse us financially and move to take over nations (see Irish bail out), but in very quick time they have also negotiated to pass this sovereignty to even larger supranational organisations creating new laws on a global basis.
In particular I speak of the ACTA agreement. Today the European Parliament is due to vote for its ratification. It is downplayed and dismissed by the European Commission and its placemen as a mere trade agreement, but it is more, much more than that as La Quadrature du Net explains.
Paris, November 23rd, 2010 — After last week’s release of the final version of the ACTA text, the European Parliament is about to adopt a resolution preparing the upcoming ratification process, during a plenary session scheduled tomorrow. This vote must be an opportunity for European lawmakers to restate their opposition to this agreement, which is bound to spread internationally some of the most extremist provisions regarding the civil and criminal enforcement of copyright, trademarks and patents. Disturbingly, the conservative EPP group tabled an isolated resolution, which gives up on the Parliament’s prerogatives.
Before the European Parliament decides to approve or refuse the ratification of ACTA (“assent vote”), it will vote on Wednesday on a resolution to remind the Commission of its views regarding the agreement. A common resolution between the European Liberals (ALDE), the Social-Democrats (S&D), the Greens (Greens/ALE) and the United Left (GUE/NGL) has been tabled1. It objects to various aspects of the ACTA agreement, including its content and process. On the other hand, the most important political group — the conservative EPP — walked out of the negotiations on this joint resolution and is putting forward a very worrying proposal which overlooks all the important issues2.
Whereas the majority of other European political groups worry that ACTA might go beyond existing EU legislation (or acquis communautaire)3, the Conservatives pretend that ACTA does not imply any change to the acquis communautaire, even though the forthcoming reform of the EU copyright, trademarks and patent enforcement framework suggests otherwise. Furthermore, the EPP resolution ignores all the important concerns voiced by some of the EU’s most important trade partners as well as experts and civil society organizations4.
“The European Parliament must reaffirm its power to legislate and protect citizens by strongly rejecting the EPP resolution! ACTA goes way beyond any trade agreement and have a direct impact on freedom of expression online, privacy and access to medicines. If the Parliament were to accept this process through the adoption the EPP resolution tomorrow, it would be renouncing to its own powers.” says Jérémie Zimmermann, spokesperson for La Quadrature du Net.
Citizens can call their elected representatives (using our tool Political Memory), especially members of the EPP, ECR and EFD groups, in order to urge them to reject the EPP resolution, to make sure that the fundamental freedoms and the rights of the public are protected by European lawmakers.
Our concerns with the EPP resolution
The EPP resolution:
- puts pressure on Internet Service Providers in order establish extra-judicial copyright enforcement in the digital environment in the spirit of the Gallo report5. By doing so, it threatens the fundamental freedoms of Internet users. In contrast, the joint S&D, ALDE, Greens and GUE resolution “instructs the Commission to present to Parliament, before initialling the Agreement, a legal analysis of the meaning, legality and enforceability of ACTA’s desired policies regarding cooperation between service providers and right holders, particularly in reference to how cooperative efforts within the business community will not limit fundamental rights of citizens, including the right to privacy, the right to freedom of expression and the right to due process”.
- paves the way for the criminalization of non-commercial infringement of copyright, patent and trademarks, through the purposely vague notion of “commercial scale”6. In contrast, the joint resolution “instructs the Council and Commission to provide a legal assessment before initialling of the agreement of whether the ACTA definition of “commercial scale” is consistent with the WTO China ruling, is fully in line with the EU principles of proportionality and subsidiarity, and will not limit the use by Member States of national exceptions in relation to criminal enforcement measures”.
- fails to recognize the illegitimacy of ACTA, which circumvent competent international organizations like WIPO or WTO7, where interesting projects for the reform of the global IPR regime are currently explored, in order to push for more extremist standards at the international level. In contrast, the joint resolution “deplores that these negotiations and Agreement have not been conducted in the framework of the existing multilateral fora (e.g.WTO and WIPO) (…)”. The resolution also “asks the Commission to refrain from imposing this Agreement on developing countries and to advocate with the other ACTA parties, so that procedures and terms of accession to ACTA are appropriately flexible and take into account the development levels of acceding countries (…)“. Moreover, it paves the way to a durable bypass of democracy by establishing an ad hoc ACTA committee competent to review amendments to the agreement.
- 1. The joint resolution is available at: http://www.laquadrature.net/files/draft_joint_resolution_ACTA_23_11_10.d…
- 2. http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=MOTION&reference=B7-2…
- 3. See for instance the legal analysis by FFII, “Some examples of ACTA going beyond present EU legislation (the acquis)“. Address: http://people.ffii.org/~ante/acta/acta-acquis2.pdf
- 4. –75 US intellectual property scholars wrote to President Barack Obama to criticize its administration for “negotiating a far-reaching international intellectual property agreement behind a shroud of secrecy, with little opportunity for public input, and with active participation by special interests who stand to gain from restrictive new international rules that may harm the public interest”: http://www.wcl.american.edu/pijip/go/blog-post/over-75-law-profs-call-fo…
–Brazil expressed it disagreement with ACTA at WIPO in late-October, saying that “ACTA may affect the balance of rights and obligations embodied in the international intellectual property system between rights holders, on the one hand, and third parties who are users of protected goods and services, on the other”: http://keionline.org/node/999
–India did too, stressing that, ACTA includes “several elements which have far reaching implications for ACTA non-Members”.
–China also criticized ACTA, stating that “excessive or unreasonably high standards for IPR protection could unfairly increase monopolistic profits of right holders, eating into the consumer surplus and further broadening the gap between the rich and the poor in the world”: http://keionline.org/node/1001
-The day before the release of the last ACTA draft, the Senators of Mexico (a negotiating country) passed a resolution calling for the suspension of negotiations and the launch of a wide-ranging consultation process: http://www.merca20.com/mexico-fuera-de-acta-casi/
–United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health, Anand Grover, commented during an October 28 public consultation on ACTA and the right to health, that the process for creating ACTA appears to violate international human rights obligations for ensuring participation in law making affecting access to medicines and other health issues: http://www.wcl.american.edu/pijip/go/blog-post/challenges-to-acta-mount-…- 5. http://www.laquadrature.net/en/Gallo_report
- 6. ACTA provides that “acts carried out on a commercial scale include at least those carried out as commercial activities for direct or indirect economic or commercial advantage.“
- 7. See http://www.laquadrature.net/en/acta-an-outdated-agreement-that-must-be-r…
WHO IN THEIR RIGHT MIND WOULD SUPPORT THIS?
The EU is barking mad. It has stolen your sovereignty, it has stolen your money, it imposes its laws upon our once green and pleasant land, it has stolen your national identities as well as your personal ones, and it is handing it all over, via the ECB and the EU Commission, to the International Banks and global Corporations.
It is selling this continent into perpetual slavery.
My contempt for this EUSSR now runs at an all time high. I have said many times that the construct of an empire of this nature can only be done peacefully with the consent of the people, without that consent it can only be held together by force.
You do not have that consent. I now await those forces to show their hand at my door and attempt to impose their will.
This empire of liars will be no different to any other, but history teaches us that eventually, the people always win, but at what cost. It is but one more detail in the establishment of a global form of government. Do these megalomaniacs really want another world war, for that I fear will be the net result of their kind of globalisation.
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This ACTA looks like something I would imagine a KGB Politburo diktat would look like, especially the consistent use of the words “the Party”. I have yet to read it through but article 6.6 & 6.7 mention this article to be signed in English, French & Spanish – just those three? And this agreement to be deposited in Japan? Are they expecting trouble then?
They can sign as many pieces of paper as they like, and if it ends up the cause of me being hauled off physically for disobedience – so be it. This fore-runner of global order, and the inflammation of anti Islamic law in the West I feel is but a tool of the globalists. The latter will get seriously out of control and bite them hard – us too.
There is an ongoing struggle amongst the masses to understand any of what goes on behind their backs, and I do not discount myself from them. It needs spelling out through the channels of Emmerdale and X factor in words of few syllables I’m afraid.
Thoroughly approve of the illustration that you have used at the bottom of the post. Lawson Narse is a genius of poster design- hard copy available here
http://www.zazzle.co.uk/a_civilised_funeral_poster-228728246399106431
Chris,
Thank you. Your words are most apt which is why I chose this particular work from Lawson. He is indeed one of the best illustrators of our time.
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This is one to take note of,
for all you Irishmen out there, watch and spread the word
March from Wood Quay Dublin to the GPO at 11am Saturday 27th
Premature this may be, but where does all this end up if the Euro, and the Eurozone go belly up?
Currency should not make any difference to ACTA, but I will be pleased for the hoped for demise of the Euro to go ahead unimpeded.
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