
	by Rick Falkvinge
	July 4, 2012
	from 
	TorrentFreak Website
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	Today at 12:56 CET, the European Parliament 
	decided whether ACTA would be ultimately rejected or whether it would drag 
	on into uncertainty. In a 478 to 39 vote, the Parliament decided to reject 
	ACTA once and for all. This means that the deceptive treaty is now dead 
	globally.
	
	This is a day of celebration.
	
	This is the day when citizens of Europe and the world won over unelected 
	bureaucrats who were being wooed and lobbied by the richest corporations of 
	the planet.
	
	The battleground wasn’t some administrative office, but the representatives 
	of the people - the European Parliament - which decided in the end to do its 
	job beautifully, and represent the people against special interests.
	
	The road to today’s victory was hard and by no means certain.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	478 against, 39 in favor and 165 abstentions
	
	
	
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	What lead us here?
	
	Six months ago, the situation looked very dark. It was all but certain that 
	ACTA would pass unnoticed in silence. 
	
	 
	
	The forces fighting for citizens’ rights tried 
	to have it referred to the European Court of Justice in order to test its 
	legality and to buy some time. But then, something happened.
	
	A monster by the name of SOPA appeared in the United States. 
	
	 
	
	Thousands of websites went dark on January 18 
	and millions of voices cried out, leaving Congress shell-shocked over the 
	fact that citizens can get that level of pissed off at corporate special 
	interests. 
	
	 
	
	SOPA was killed...
 
	
	 
	
	
	
	 
	
	 
	
	In the wake of this, as citizens realized that 
	they don’t need to take that kind of corporate abuse lying down and asking 
	for more, the community floodlights centered on ACTA.
	
	The activism carried over beautifully to defeat this monster. Early 
	February, there were rallies all over Europe, leaving the European 
	Parliament equally shell-shocked.
	
	The party groups turned on a cent and declared their opposition to ACTA in 
	solidarity with the citizen rallies all over the continent, after having 
	realized what a piece of shameless mail-order legislation it really was, to 
	the horrors of the corporate shills who thought this was a done deal. Those 
	shills tried, tried hard, tried right up until today, to postpone the vote 
	on ACTA past the attention of the public and the activists.
	
	Alas, they don’t understand the net. And there’s one key thing right there: 
	the net doesn’t forget.
 
	
	 
	
	
	
	
	Parliament members right 
	after the vote
 
	
	 
	
	But the key takeaway here is that it was us, the 
	activists, that made this happen. 
	
	 
	
	Everyone in the European Parliament are taking 
	turns to praise all the activists across Europe and the world for drawing 
	their attention to what utter garbage this really was, not some 
	run-of-the-mill rubberstamp paper, but actually a really dangerous piece of 
	proposed legislation. Everybody thanks the activists for that. Yes, that’s 
	you. You should lean back, smile, and pat yourself on the back here. 
	
	 
	
	Each and every one of us has every reason to 
	feel proud today.
	
	 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	What comes next?
	
	In theory, ACTA could still come into force between 
	
	the United States and a 
	number of smaller states. Ten states have been negotiating it, and six of 
	those need to ratify it to have it come into force.
	
	 
	
	In theory, this could become a treaty between,
	
		
			- 
			
			the United States
 
			- 
			
			Morocco
 
			- 
			
			Mexico
 
			- 
			
			New Zealand
 
			- 
			
			Australia
 
			- 
			
			Switzerland
 
		
	
	
	(But wait, the 
	
	Mexican Senate has already 
	rejected ACTA. As has 
	
	Australia and 
	
	Switzerland in practice. Oh well… a 
	treaty between the United States and Morocco, then, in 
	
	the unlikely event 
	that the United States will actually and formally ratify it. You can see 
	where this is going.)
	
	As 
	
	described before, without the support of the European 
	Union, ACTA is dead. Doesn’t exist.
	
	The European Commissioner responsible for the treaty, Karel de Gucht, has 
	said that he will ignore any rejections and re-table it before the European 
	Parliament until it passes. That’s not going to happen. Parliament takes its 
	dignity very seriously and does not tolerate that kind of contempt, 
	fortunately. 
	
	 
	
	This is something relatively new in the history 
	of the European Union’s democracy - the first time I saw Parliament stand up 
	for its dignity was during the Telecoms Package, where the Commission also 
	tried to ram through three-strikes provisions. (Instead, Parliament made 
	“three strikes” schemes illegal in the entire European Union.)
	
	That said, many of the bad things in ACTA will return under other names. For 
	the lobbyists, this is a nine-to-five job of jabbing against the legislation 
	until it gives way. Just another day at work. We need to remain vigilant 
	against special interests who will return again, again, and again, until we 
	make sure that the legislative road for them is completely blocked. We must 
	remain watchful.
	
	But not today.
	
		
		Today, we celebrate a job extraordinarily 
		well done.
		
		Today, on July 4, Europe celebrates a day of independence from 
		American special interests.
		
		Today, we stood up for our most basic rights against corporate giants, 
		and won.
	
	
	Congratulations to all of us, and thanks to all 
	brothers and sisters on the barricades across the world who made this 
	happen.