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Climate Change

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-49946821

So how long until they're (rightfully) declared a terrorist organisation?

I might start a spread bet on how long a vegan could last under enhanced interrogation. My money is on about 0.3 seconds (or 2.3 allowing for the to stop for a gulp on their athsma inhaler).
 
I see loads of the old prosecco swillers in town today protesting under the banner of extinction rebelion. Looked like a good excuse to act like idiots to me.

Also saw a long queue in McDonalds which I found slightly contradictive but alas that's like all major causes these days.
 
We should counter protest by throwing meat at them.

Either that or get their parents to shut their trust funds.
 
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20...t-extinction-rebellions-brand-neo-puritanism/

There were decent citizens, concerned about the future of the planet, among the thousands of activists who took to the streets yesterday for Extinction Rebellion’s (XR) climate strike. Yet the organisation they represent has become increasingly irrational, uncompromising and extreme. Their latest bout of demonstrations includes disrupting public access to a Central London hospital - with XR activists, not medical experts, apparently given the ultimate say on whether to allow patients through. One Scotland Yard source warned that the protests are putting greater strain on police resources than the 2017 terror attacks.

XR is frequently portrayed as a “new-age” hippy collective, a label that ostensibly fits with their vegan diets and impromptu yoga sessions. Yet their flashy audio equipment and polyester tents run in tandem with a weirdly Medieval vibe. Druidic visionaries in red and green robes mingle with acrobats and circus performers. Even their dance moves are a strange fusion of the old and the new; eurythmy meets Morris dancing. Their trendy eco-radicalism likewise disguises antiquated ideas.

Reading its policy agenda, it becomes clear that XR is a fanatical group preaching imminent global destruction. It proposes to dismantle swathes of the economy and return to an agrarian, “prelapsarian”, pre-capitalist way of life. Its members share a moral certainty – bordering on arrogance – that justifies their extreme behaviour.


Their gospel is one of abstinence – at least for the little people. Like the 17th century Puritans who believed the state should enforce moral standards by closing down theatres and cutting down maypoles, the XR “Roundheads” tried to “occupy” Heathrow to stop people reaching their holiday destinations.

In Ben Jonson’s Bartholomew Fair, based on the real charter fair held at Smithfield since the 12th century, he savagely satirises this “Killjoy for the sake of it” tendency. Yesterday, the Puritans’ intellectual descendents tried to “occupy” the real Smithfield Market – a largely middle-class clique trying to destroy the businesses of market traders only guilty of trying to make an honest living from selling meat. The hypocrisies of jet-setting eco-celebs like Emma Thompson passed without censure.

XR’s alignment with BirthStrike, a movement which encourages people not to have children in response to the coming “civilisation collapse”, rehashes another failed ideology, Malthusianism. Back in 1798, the Reverend Thomas Robert Malthus published his influential Essay on Population, predicting famine unless wars and disease raised the death rate. He was proven wrong by the explosion in the global population and food supply that followed, thanks to agricultural innovation. The long-term trend has been for real food prices to decline and production to rise far more rapidly than population.


But no matter how often apocalyptic warnings fail to come true, another one soon arrives, and doom-mongers are often poor predictors of human ingenuity. In 1894, a newspaper columnist argued that in 50 years the capital would be buried under 9 feet of manure – failing to anticipate the arrival of the combustion engine that would soon render horse-drawn transport a quaint novelty.

We should treat XR’s warnings of imminent catastrophe with similar scepticism. Yet whereas contemporary onlookers mocked the Puritans, today’s establishment wouldn’t dream of critiquing their uncompromising activism. It doesn’t help that many politicians share their troubling preference for ambitious-yet-vague targets over real-world solutions. But don’t be fooled by these Millenarian Millennials. Beneath the kaftans lurk a touch of feudalism, a sprinkle of Malthusianism and a healthy dose of 17th century Puritanism.
 
Did anyone hear the guy on radio last night talking about refreezing the artic?
That's what we need to or should do. No idea how to do it, but it's what we should be doing.
 
Did anyone hear the guy on radio last night talking about refreezing the artic?
That's what we need to or should do. No idea how to do it, but it's what we should be doing.
"What do we want?"
"Er.... We're not actually sure. We kind of have some vague targets but we don't have any idea how to achieve them"

"When do we want it?"
"Sooner than is humanly possible"

Not very catchy is it?
 
Last edited:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20...t-extinction-rebellions-brand-neo-puritanism/

There were decent citizens, concerned about the future of the planet, among the thousands of activists who took to the streets yesterday for Extinction Rebellion’s (XR) climate strike. Yet the organisation they represent has become increasingly irrational, uncompromising and extreme. Their latest bout of demonstrations includes disrupting public access to a Central London hospital - with XR activists, not medical experts, apparently given the ultimate say on whether to allow patients through. One Scotland Yard source warned that the protests are putting greater strain on police resources than the 2017 terror attacks.

XR is frequently portrayed as a “new-age” hippy collective, a label that ostensibly fits with their vegan diets and impromptu yoga sessions. Yet their flashy audio equipment and polyester tents run in tandem with a weirdly Medieval vibe. Druidic visionaries in red and green robes mingle with acrobats and circus performers. Even their dance moves are a strange fusion of the old and the new; eurythmy meets Morris dancing. Their trendy eco-radicalism likewise disguises antiquated ideas.

Reading its policy agenda, it becomes clear that XR is a fanatical group preaching imminent global destruction. It proposes to dismantle swathes of the economy and return to an agrarian, “prelapsarian”, pre-capitalist way of life. Its members share a moral certainty – bordering on arrogance – that justifies their extreme behaviour.


Their gospel is one of abstinence – at least for the little people. Like the 17th century Puritans who believed the state should enforce moral standards by closing down theatres and cutting down maypoles, the XR “Roundheads” tried to “occupy” Heathrow to stop people reaching their holiday destinations.

In Ben Jonson’s Bartholomew Fair, based on the real charter fair held at Smithfield since the 12th century, he savagely satirises this “Killjoy for the sake of it” tendency. Yesterday, the Puritans’ intellectual descendents tried to “occupy” the real Smithfield Market – a largely middle-class clique trying to destroy the businesses of market traders only guilty of trying to make an honest living from selling meat. The hypocrisies of jet-setting eco-celebs like Emma Thompson passed without censure.

XR’s alignment with BirthStrike, a movement which encourages people not to have children in response to the coming “civilisation collapse”, rehashes another failed ideology, Malthusianism. Back in 1798, the Reverend Thomas Robert Malthus published his influential Essay on Population, predicting famine unless wars and disease raised the death rate. He was proven wrong by the explosion in the global population and food supply that followed, thanks to agricultural innovation. The long-term trend has been for real food prices to decline and production to rise far more rapidly than population.


But no matter how often apocalyptic warnings fail to come true, another one soon arrives, and doom-mongers are often poor predictors of human ingenuity. In 1894, a newspaper columnist argued that in 50 years the capital would be buried under 9 feet of manure – failing to anticipate the arrival of the combustion engine that would soon render horse-drawn transport a quaint novelty.

We should treat XR’s warnings of imminent catastrophe with similar scepticism. Yet whereas contemporary onlookers mocked the Puritans, today’s establishment wouldn’t dream of critiquing their uncompromising activism. It doesn’t help that many politicians share their troubling preference for ambitious-yet-vague targets over real-world solutions. But don’t be fooled by these Millenarian Millennials. Beneath the kaftans lurk a touch of feudalism, a sprinkle of Malthusianism and a healthy dose of 17th century Puritanism.

All my expectations of the author of this were confirmed looking at her other articles. The Smithfield takeover wasn’t XR, that’s a very basic fact to get wrong. Throwing out standard generalisations of the type of people she thinks (wants) to be at the protests doesn’t help make the article any less misinformed.




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All my expectations of the author of this were confirmed looking at her other articles. The Smithfield takeover wasn’t XR, that’s a very basic fact to get wrong. Throwing out standard generalisations of the type of people she thinks (wants) to be at the protests doesn’t help make the article any less misinformed.




Sitting on my porcelain throne using Fapatalk
Weren't they begging for supporters to bring them vegan food yesterday?
 
Haven't really been watching much TV but caught a little of the news and some of the reports from the XR protests looked remarkably similar to those C4 spoof news shows.

I shouldn't of laughed...but it did make me chuckle.
 
Climate activist group Extinction Rebellion claims its will 'shut down' London City Airport from tomorrow for three days amid its ongoing protest in the capital.

The group says it plans to 'peacefully occupy' the airport in the east of the capital.

It comes amid its two-week 'shut down' that has seen protests blockade key bridges and streets around the capital.

Extinction Rebellion says it plans to protest at the airport for three full days.

It said City airport is being targeted to highlight what the protest group says is the incompatibility of the site's planned £2 billion expansion with the climate emergency declared by Parliament, and its promise for the UK to become carbon neutral by 2050.

The group's statement announcing its London City Airport today said: "Protest targets the continued Government support for expansion of air travel, which benefits the rich and punishes the poor, in the face of the Climate and Ecological Emergency."

Extinction Rebellion says its "rebels" will take a leaf from Hong Kong protesters' books, by staging a sit-in occupation of the airport's terminal building.

The group said activists will use their bodies to peacefully block arrivals and departures gates, and some planned to "glue" themselves in.

In earlier plans the group had said it would shut down Heathrow Airport using drones in protest against the plans to install a third runway.

It later postponed the drone protest amid widespread criticism, and the Met Police warning of heavy penalties.

The group's international protests kicked off in London on Monday, with activists occupying key landmarks around Westminster.

The protesters have occupied key bridges, including Westminster and Lambeth, and took over Trafalgar Square to demand action on climate issues.
 
Climate activist group Extinction Rebellion claims its will 'shut down' London City Airport from tomorrow for three days amid its ongoing protest in the capital.

The group says it plans to 'peacefully occupy' the airport in the east of the capital.

It comes amid its two-week 'shut down' that has seen protests blockade key bridges and streets around the capital.

Extinction Rebellion says it plans to protest at the airport for three full days.

It said City airport is being targeted to highlight what the protest group says is the incompatibility of the site's planned £2 billion expansion with the climate emergency declared by Parliament, and its promise for the UK to become carbon neutral by 2050.

The group's statement announcing its London City Airport today said: "Protest targets the continued Government support for expansion of air travel, which benefits the rich and punishes the poor, in the face of the Climate and Ecological Emergency."

Extinction Rebellion says its "rebels" will take a leaf from Hong Kong protesters' books, by staging a sit-in occupation of the airport's terminal building.

The group said activists will use their bodies to peacefully block arrivals and departures gates, and some planned to "glue" themselves in.

In earlier plans the group had said it would shut down Heathrow Airport using drones in protest against the plans to install a third runway.

It later postponed the drone protest amid widespread criticism, and the Met Police warning of heavy penalties.

The group's international protests kicked off in London on Monday, with activists occupying key landmarks around Westminster.

The protesters have occupied key bridges, including Westminster and Lambeth, and took over Trafalgar Square to demand action on climate issues.
I'm fairly sure that can be defined as terrorism. There's a lot of armed police in airports.

That would be fun.
 
terrorism

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