The UK Electoral Commission has agreed to the
registration of the MP3 Party, which aims to radically simplify
British government and civil administration.
The Electoral
Commission had initially refused the registration on the belief that
the party's name constituted a trademark violation,
Ciaran
Buckley writes.
The inspiration for the party's name is
drawn from the MP3 community, who swap digital media files on-line.
"The downloading of music is not an economic phenomenon, it is
cultural and political," Party Leader Ruslan G. Fedorovsky told
ElectricNews.Net. "MP3 collectors aren't just people who want to
listen to music for free, they are part of a community."
Fedorovsky, who is the managing director of
audiobooksforfree.com, said the party's philosophy is based on the
mathematical theory of complex systems, which states that complex
systems of any kind are inherently dysfunctional. Therefore when
social, legal and administrative systems reach a certain level of
complexity they cease functioning, he said. The MP3 Party wants to
apply this mathematical theory to politics and government.
The rebellious nature of the party is inspired by the
rebellious, sometimes illegal, practice of downloading MP3s, the
Russian-born Fedorovsky said. "It's funky to be a geek and MP3
allows you to be an outlaw without knowing anything about
technology," he said. "With MP3 you can become an outlaw just by
clicking on a button."
In addition to its constituency
among the MP3 community, the party hopes to attract young voters who
are apathetic with regard to old-fashioned political processes and
systems, Fedorovsky said.
The party aims to implement its
simplification policy into all aspects of life in the UK, including
taxation, law, economics, foreign policy, immigration and the
monarchy. Fedorovsky said that the MP3 Party's simplification
platform transcends traditional party lines, and politicians who
introduce flat taxes, or governments that implement
paperwork-reduction programmes, are already providing examples of
the MP3 Party's philosophy in action.
One of the proposed
slogans for the party reads "Elect us and we will delete one
regulation per day, one law per week, one subsidy per month and one
tax per year."
Recent research does indicate the emergence
of on-line communities whose lifestyles are significantly shaped by
the ability to swap content across the Internet. A report released
at the end of June by the US-based Pew Internet and American Life
Project identified what it called a "broadband lifestyle" in the US.
The report, entitled "The Broadband Difference - How Online
Americans' Behavior Changes with High-Speed Internet Connections at
Home," found that 39 percent of broadband users have created content
such as Web sites, that 43 percent have swapped files and displayed
photos on-line and nearly two-thirds have downloaded games, video or
pictures. In all categories, at least 14 percent of these users said
they performed these activities every day.
©
ElectricNews.Net.