<P> A number of other multi-axis models of political thought exist . Some are based on similar axes to the political compass . A similar chart appeared in 1970 in The Floodgates of Anarchy by Albert Meltzer and Stuart Christie, and in 1968 in the Rampart Journal of Individualist Thought by Maurice C. Bryson and William R. McDill . Meltzer and Christie's and Bryson and McDill are pretty much the same as Nolan's, but for a change of nomenclature, and the Political Compass is also the same, but flipped and rotated 45 ° anti-clockwise . </P> <P> The website does not explain its scoring system . A number of writers, including Tom Utley and Brian Patrick Mitchell, have criticised its validity . </P> <P> The politicalcompass.org website does not reveal the people behind it, beyond the fact that it seems to be based in the United Kingdom . At the bottom of any page on the website, it is stated that the political compass's copyright belongs to an organisation named "Pace News Limited". Pace News Limited is a company registered in New Zealand whose director is Wayne Brittenden . According to The New York Times, the site is the work of Wayne Brittenden, a political journalist . According to Tom Utley, writing in The Daily Telegraph, the site is connected to One World Action, a charity founded by Glenys Kinnock . An early version of the site was published on One World Action's web server . </P>

Where do you land on the political compass