UN Climate activists target jets, yachts and golf in a string of global protests against luxury

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By David Brunat

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) — Climate activists have spraypainted a superyacht, blocked private jets from taking off and plugged holes in golf courses this summer as part of an intensifying campaign against the emissions-spewing lifestyles of the ultrawealthy.

Climate activism has intensified in the past few years as the planet warms to dangerous levels, igniting more extreme heat, floods, storms and wildfires around the world. Tactics have been getting more radical, with some protesters gluing themselves to roads, disrupting high-profile sporting events like golf and tennis and even splashing famous pieces of artwork with paint or soup.

They’re now turning their attention to the wealthy, after long targeting some of the world’s most profitable companies – oil and gas conglomerates, banks and insurance firms that continue to invest in fossil fuels.

“We do not point the finger at the people but at their lifestyle, the injustice it represents,” said Karen Killeen, an Extinction Rebellion activist who was involved in protests in Ibiza, Spain, a favorite summer spot for the wealthy. She said the group is protesting unnecessary emissions such as superrich individuals going to pick up a pizza by boat. “In a climate emergency, it’s an atrocity,” she said.

Killeen and others from climate activist group Futuro Vegetal — or Vegetable Future — spraypainted a $300 million superyacht belonging to Walmart heir Nancy Walton Laurie. Protesters held up a sign that read, “You consume, others suffer.”

In Switzerland, some 100 activists disrupted Europe’s biggest private jet sales fair in Geneva when they chained themselves to aircraft gangways and the exhibition entrance. In Germany, climate group Letzte Generation — which translates to Last Generation — spraypainted a private jet in the resort island of Sylt, in the North Sea. In Spain, activists plugged holes in golf courses to protest the sport’s heavy water needs during hot dry spells.

In the U.S., Abigail Disney, the grand-niece of Walt Disney, was arrested at East Hampton Town Airport, New York, in July along with 13 other protesters for blocking cars from entering or exiting the parking lot. It was the first of up to eight actions carried out in the exclusive Hamptons area. Activists also crashed a golf course, disrupted a museum gala and demonstrated outside some private luxury homes.

“Luxury practices are disproportionately contributing to the climate crisis at this point,” said University of Maryland social scientist Dana Fisher. According to a 2021 report by nonprofit Oxfam, if all planet-warming emissions were attributed to the people producing them, the richest 1% will be responsible for around 16% of emissions by 2030. “It makes a lot of sense for these activists to be calling out this toxic behavior.”

Richard Wilk, an economic anthropologist at Indiana University, said luxury travel is “the real culprit” in the emissions of the ultrawealthy.

He published estimates of top billionaires’ annual emissions in 2021 and found that a superyacht — with permanent crew, helicopter pad, submarines and pools — emits about 7,020 tons of carbon dioxide a year, over 1,500 times higher than a typical family car. And private aircraft in Europe alone last year caused more than 3 million tons of carbon pollution, equivalent to the average annual CO2 emissions of over half a million EU residents, according to the nonprofit Greenpeace.

But Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael Mann warned that attention away from the fossil fuel companies — which are responsible for at least 70% of all emissions — and toward the rich could be “playing right into the hands of the fossil fuel industry and the ‘deflection campaign’ they’ve used to divert attention from regulation by emphasizing individual carbon footprints over the much larger footprint of polluters.”

“The solution is to get everyone to use less carbon-based energy,” whether wealthy or lower-income people, he said.

David Gitman, president of Monarch Air Group, a Florida private air charter provider, encouraged activists to think twice about whether they’re taking the right approach.

“If their activism goes toward some sort of actual assistance to real programs to make real change like sustainable aviation fuel, like carbon offsets, I think that this kind of activism can help achieve those results,” said Gitman. “Now, if they go out and they spray-paint a private jet in an airport in Europe, is that going to get those results? In my opinion, no.”

Fisher, of the University of Maryland, was also skeptical that the activism was effective in changing behavior by the wealthy.

In some cases, governments have stepped in with regulations. France is cracking down on the use of private jets for short journeys, and earlier this year, the Netherlands’ Schiphol Airport also announced plans to ban private jets.

But as protests escalate, Fisher and Wilk say they could still move the needle toward behavior change.

“Public shaming is one of the most powerful ways of controlling people,” Wilk said. “It acts in a lot of different ways to embarrass people, to make them more conscious of the consequences of their actions.”
 
“Public shaming is one of the most powerful ways of controlling people,” Wilk said. “It acts in a lot of different ways to embarrass people, to make them more conscious of the consequences of their actions.”
Or it makes them dig their heels in and beat Hillary Clinton in a presidential race.
 
Excellent choice of targets.
Just hope you didn't inconvenience the rich bastard funding you.

“Public shaming is one of the most powerful ways of controlling people,” Wilk said. “It acts in a lot of different ways to embarrass people, to make them more conscious of the consequences of their actions.”
Which is why shaming faggots and pedos is now currently being forbidden by perverts and sodomites.
 
Talk about the biting the band that feeds you. It's not us poor normies funding your cause.

But nice to see that raising awareness = causing more damage to the earth. No matter what happens, the human race will survive and adapt unless the earth is destroyed into billions of pieces. We've been around for a long ass time.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Halmaz
Finally they go after the right things. It's pretty much cliche to point out how climate activists only ever want to disrupt the lives of the working class and pursue policies that reduce their living standards, but seem completely blind to the super rich who between their mansions, yachts, and jets consume more energy than thousands of working class families.
As @ZazietheBeast says though, this may be the end of some of these climate protest groups. I would even bet we'll see the end of climate hysteria by the end of the decade, they'll move on to something else. I'm old enough to have seen a number of environmental hysterics come and go, other things being mysteriously shifted, and still others being 100% certain predictions that people just forgot one day. About 20 or so years ago, paper bags at the grocery store were going to destroy all the forests, and plastic bags were the solution. The ozone layer was going to disappear if we didn't stop using aerosol cans and air conditioning. Some US states had less than 1 year of landfill capacity and were going to become giant garbage dumps if we didn't stop buying things. All of these things demand we make changes to our habits and take a hit on our quality of life. Naturally, the rich do it 1,000x worse, people notice, they get called out on it, and that's where the funding for whatever environmental effort gets diverted to something else.
 
Excellent choice of targets.
Just hope you didn't inconvenience the rich bastard funding you.
My guess: the rich bastard who funnels money to them does 2 things:
1. uses the money he spend on climate activists as a tax write off (donation to a charitable cause)
2. uses the damage done to his property as a tax write off because those are "business assets"
I call that a Win-Win

Also: considering how aggressive some people have become when they get disrupted by climate activists I can see them change targets just to get a better PR. After all rich people are usually despised by the peasants
 
Remember when the cops just stood watching when these faggots were "protesting" and blocked the road so you could not get to work?

Block the wrong private jet, like horse-face Kerry's, one time to many and watch how fucking quick they are sent to gitmo.

Also, don't just block the jet, bring a hammer and throw it into the turbine. That will take it out of commission for many months as the entire engine is dismantled, checked and rebuilt.
Fag Kerry will say "protesting to save the planet is good, but 'not like that', and 'not my plane'" and then he will order the cops to shoot you.
 
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