BERLIN, Germany — Bruno Kramm works a crowd dressed in an entirely black tuxedo and a crooked top hat resting on his orange hair. Around him, thousands of people in dreadlocks, T-shirts and thriftshop-chic attire wave signs and shout slogans. They’re protesting internet surveillance ahead of national elections this week. It’s an issue Kramm
Has Germany’s Pirate Party Already Blown Its Shot At Parliament?
Founded to fight copyright restrictions and internet policing, the party failed to capitalize on discontent over the Snowden revelations.