Three individuals targeted National Gallery paintings an hour after Phoebe Plummer and Anna Holland were jailed for similar attack in 2022

Climate activists have thrown tomato soup over two Sunflowers paintings by Vincent van Gogh, just an hour after two others were jailed for a similar protest action in 2022.

Three supporters of Just Stop Oil walked into the National Gallery in London, where an exhibition of Van Gogh’s collected works is on display, at 2.30pm on Friday afternoon, and threw Heinz soup over Sunflowers 1889 and Sunflowers 1888.

The latter was the same work targeted by Phoebe Plummer and Anna Holland in 2022. That pair are now among 25 supporters of Just Stop Oil in jail for climate protests.

  • PumpkinSkink@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    So if throwing paint at a entierly replaceable cover for a dusty old painting is too far gone to be acceptable, what action can we take to stop oil production? Like. It needs to stop. To continue producing fossil fuels is a death cult. It needs to stop, like, a decade ago. I ask genuinely, how is this too far, and what is an acceptable response to an existential threat?

    edit: On the off chance someone reads this so long after the post, I just want to point out that nobody actually engaged with my question here.

    • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      So if throwing paint at a entierly replaceable cover for a dusty old painting is too far gone to be acceptable, what action can we take to stop oil production?

      God, I wish someone could actually trace the train of events that would lead to reduced oil production from this other than some bizarre notion that throwing soup at a priceless artifact of human heritage will Energize The Masses™ or suddenly convince people who think climate change is a hoax or overblown that it’s actually a serious problem.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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        2 months ago

        Imagine if these activists spent more time going after companies benefiting from fossil fuel production rather than throwing soup in museums…

        • WaxedWookie@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          They’ve done that too, and have encountered media blackouts.

          As nice as it would be if they could simply fix the climate problem with the disruption a handful of protests cause, they can’t, and need to draw public attention to the problem.

          These demonstrations open up the conversation in threads like this - you agree there’s a problem, you agree these protests don’t fix the problem, so let’s talk about what will.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            2 months ago

            Seems to me that it would be pretty difficult to encounter a media blackout to do this sort of thing at, for example, global climate summits, oil company shareholder meetings, etc.

            But I’m not seeing much soup being thrown there.

            • itslilith
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              2 months ago

              In Germany, protestors repeatedly shut oil pipelines off and locked themselves to the valves to prevent their reopening, blocking oil flow for several hours every time. I consume a lot of news, both mainstream and in my leftist bubble. That story barely registered anywhere.

              The exact same protestors threw mashed potatoes at a Van Gogh. They were the main headline for over a week.

              Hell, some guy set himself on fire a few years ago and it was in the news for half a day.

              The media blackout is real, but it’s not a huge conspiracy. It’s just that the media reports on what gets them clicks, and nothing generates clicks like outrage. That’s why so much reporting also conveniently forgets to mention that the paintings are protected by plexiglass and nothing ever got damaged. But all the controversy gets people talking, and some people will inevitably question what drives people to do something like that. That is the real objective. If they wanted to be popular, they’d to greenwashed recycling videos on YouTube instead, or whatever else is hip with the neoliberal peddlers of personal responsibility at the moment.

              • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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                2 months ago

                And how will this get corporations to stop drilling for and selling and taking advantage of fossil fuels? How do you get from throwing soup to that?

                • WaxedWookie@lemmy.world
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                  2 months ago

                  You stop the problem from being buried under the fact that everyone is struggling to get by, or distracted by whatever the fuck the likes of the Kardashians are up to. You bring it to the forefront and prompt conversations like these - conversations where someone might realise that to stay the course on this one is to roll down the road to the apocalypse, and maybe they’d like to do something about that.

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              By ‘media blackout’ they mean ‘it was a blip on the radar like this is, but this is NOW and thus relevant and important’

              • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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                2 months ago

                The people who talk about ‘media blackouts’ also seem to forget that everyone has an internet-connected video camera in their pockets.

                • WaxedWookie@lemmy.world
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                  2 months ago

                  What are you even trying to say here? That any bastard with a camera and something to show will magically be seen, or that everyone with a smartphone is going to be aware of everything that affects them? Because neither of those things is remotely close to the way the world works.

                  You were aware of the JSO protesters shutting down the oil pipeline? If and that’s a big “if” so, do you think the average schmuck is? No. But chances are that they’re aware of the stunts like the soup.

          • gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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            2 months ago

            I feel like we’re kind of entering an era where direct action and ecology-motivated terrorism are going to start becoming a thing. And I’m honestly not sure that would be a bad thing.

            • BrightCandle@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Peaceful protests have not worked, disruptive protests have been widely villified and the protestors jailed for very long sentences. If you are facing 2-3 years for holding up a banner or throwing some paint seems like criminal damage of a fossil fuel facility isn’t likely to net more years. As many have said in the past governments ignore peaceful protests at their peril, because once its clear that doesn’t work they become not peaceful.

            • WaxedWookie@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Assuming there’s no collateral damage to speak of, I’d argue it would be an act of self-defence for the benefit of all of us. In principle, I’d struggle to find reason to be upset by it.

              • _NoName_@lemmy.ml
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                2 months ago

                There will be collateral damage. There always is. The idea there wouldn’t be collateral damage is already setting the bar higher than is feasible.

                • WaxedWookie@lemmy.world
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                  2 months ago

                  I don’t think that’s true at all, but if it is, it becomes a question of whether that damage is outweighed by the benefit of the action.

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            let’s talk about what will.

            Stop throwing soup.

            We’re at the point where idiots throwing soup are called sing more environmental damage than backwoods yahoos rolling coal. Shall we protest soup abuse? Because that’s more likely to help the environment

            • WaxedWookie@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              People throwing soup to protest climate change are doing more environmental damage than people burning fossil fuels in the dirtiest way possible because that’s their gender identity or whateverthefuck? You’ll need to explain that one for me, champ.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            2 months ago

            We’ve literally been talking about it for decades. An Inconvenient Truth won the Oscar in 2006. What has talking about it accomplished?

            • FundMECFSResearch
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              2 months ago

              That’s not my point. Everytime they deface something, we start talking again about stopping oil production. Sure we talk about it without that push too. But this means we start talking about it more.

              • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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                2 months ago

                When has talking about ending reliance on fossil fuels ever stopped? I don’t remember it stopping.

                Most people are aware that the Earth is warming and fossil fuels are the cause. There’s nothing you or I can do about that. It’s the corporations that have to be stopped. I can’t stop them. You can’t stop them. Talking about them won’t stop them and neither will throwing cans of soup.

                In fact, I have no idea what will stop them, but talking sure as fuck won’t.

            • AA5B@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Speaking from across the ocean where we’re really behind …… I’ve seen articles about UK having days entirely powered by renewables. I see a massive transit system. I see double the EV acceptance. I see why desperado commitment to ending production of gasoline cars.

              It may be way too slow but I see a shit load has changed over the years. A lot has been accomplished. Let’s try to speed this up rather than give reactionaries more ammo to delay

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            2 months ago

            We’re not talking about stopping oil production. We’re talking about these nutcases. And when we do get back to the important topic, now it’s harder to get support, harder to stay on topic, environmental concerns are more likely to be dismissed with jokes about throwing soup

        • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Then they wouldn’t get their five minutes of fame, though. And even worse, they couldn’t even claim their five minutes of fame was some self-righteous moment that they should be lionized for. A fate worse than death, basically.

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Sounds a lot like boring work that has no grand trumpets or asspats at the end of the rainbow, or that requires specialized skills and education. Can’t we just draw some attention to ourselves, cry out “Climate change!” and call it a day?

              • WaxedWookie@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                Nah - let’s just feel superior by whining about people doing something to defer the apocalypse - both stunts to draw attention, and shutting down oil pipelines directly.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            2 months ago

            I brought up Karen Silkwood and Erin Brockovich elsewhere. They were not put in cages. They were just willing to do some very hard work rather than just stunts.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            I’m sure you’ve never suggested people doing something might be better off spending their time doing something else, but most people have.

          • Aabbcc@lemm.ee
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            2 months ago

            YouTube provides transcripts. It’s in the discription on the website

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              YouTube provides transcripts.

              Wow. I am behind the times. I’ll look through it then.

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              “No art on a dead planet” is a braindead justification and does not in any way outline how vandalism of art is supposed to translate into climate activism, while the four criteria outlined for activism are valid but in no way provide a special justification for vandalism of cultural artifacts, which has a significantly greater backlash from the exact kind of educated people most likely to get involved in climate activism, and very little disruptive potential.

              “I understand that we’re pissing people off but there’s no other way to get attention” and “Negative attention is good attention, because maybe it will cause people to become positively engaged with the cause” are not particularly compelling rebuttals in the critics section.

              “JSO was central in setting the 2024 Labour agenda” is utterly deluded, while all the cited actions by their sister organizations in Europe are much more traditional instances of civil disobedience that have long-proven track records and a clear and logical progression of action-to-influence.

              This really reinforces my view that JSO are terribly naive and have no real idea on how their actions will seriously lead to mass change of opinions on climate change.

              • Aabbcc@lemm.ee
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                2 months ago

                “No art on a dead planet” is a braindead justification and does not in any way outline how vandalism of art is supposed to translate into climate activism

                If damaged art hurts your feelings get mad at the government killing all art on the planet and not the activists partially damaging some art.

                “I understand that we’re pissing people off but there’s no other way to get attention” … not particularly compelling rebuttals in the critics section

                Why not? How else should they be getting attention?

                “JSO was central in setting the 2024 Labour agenda” is utterly deluded,

                I won’t disagree

                This really reinforces my view that JSO are terribly naive and have no real idea on how their actions will seriously lead to mass change of opinions on climate change.

                Yeah I don’t get the vibe from you that you’d change your view

                Partially related but do you have any evidence that jso tactics has a “greater backlash from the exact kind of educated people most likely to get involved in climate activism” or is that kinda vibes based

    • webadict@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      It’s weird that there are people in this thread that think defacing the protective barrier of a painting is too far, but advocating for harming or killing oil industry executives is not because the painting didn’t do anything to cause our climate emergency. By that argument, defacing a building with grafitti can’t work, blocking traffic would put more pollution in the air, blowing up a pipeline would kill innocent people and animals.

      Nothing is good enough for them except the status quo. They’d rather a museum burned down in a riot than plexiglass get covered in soup because riots are okay (but once that happens, the pearls will be clutched again.)

    • jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      What’s your plan to keep society functioning with the immediate end of fossil fuels?

      • PumpkinSkink@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        That wasn’t my question. But if you must know, if the choice is between “maintaining the current standard of living” and “stop risking the habitability of the one place known that can support life”, I choose the latter. Everytime. And it’s crazy to choose the former.

        • RvTV95XBeo@sh.itjust.works
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          2 months ago

          But what about The Economy®™?!? We can’t possibly have Apple only make 10s of billions of dollars in profit instead of 100s of billions of dollars because we made the price of goods destroying our planet more expensive!

          If we start to make the cost of goods proportional to the associated environmental destruction, I won’t be able to buy the 12th pair of Nikes for my shoe collection. I might have to wear my clothes more than once, and GASP, take public transit places.

          Like sure, our grandkids may get to grow up in a world looking like something out of Mad Max, but at least I wouldn’t have to suffer any inconveniences to my lifestyle.

      • Aabbcc@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        Kinda dumb of you to assume the only option to stop oil is an immediate cessation of all usage

            • jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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              2 months ago

              We don’t have a means to replace energy needs today and we were even further away a decade ago.

              • Aabbcc@lemm.ee
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                You don’t think maybe we would be closer to having that means of energy production now if we started 50 years ago when we noticed the impacts of climate change?

                Youre assuming climate activists have the MORONIC idea of just transitioning to shit tech, instead of the idea of investing in making tech that can replace oil usage

                • jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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                  I don’t assume all climate activists have the moronic opnion that we need to transition to shit tech, just the ones who say we need to be off fissile fuels a decade ago.

              • JustARaccoon@lemmy.world
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                2 months ago

                And we never will if we don’t start making progress on it, it’ll always be unfeasible because the powers that be don’t start making changes unless it’s doable within one election cycle. Just Stop Oil isn’t asking for immediate stopping of oil, just moving the deadline to 2030, which means there’s a few years to realistically invest in other forms of energy generation like nuclear, green energy, and other ways.

                • jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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                  The OP wanted a complete stop of production of fossil fuels a decade ago. That is a completely different statement than we need to curb fossil fuel use.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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        Why does it have to be an immediate end and not a phase out? Right now, we’re not even phasing out.

        • jimbolauski@lemm.ee
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          When someone calls for ending something last decade it required immediate action now.

        • AlexanderTheDead@lemmy.world
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          Pretty uncharitable interpretation of something posted by someone who I would guess you have a common goal with.

          People that give a fuck about “priceless art” or whatever are so silly. Lmao.

          I’m not saying to not continue posting articles like this, but I do think that maybe your time would be better spent arguing with people who don’t believe in climate change instead of arguing with people who do believe in climate change.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            People that give a fuck about “priceless art” or whatever are so silly. Lmao.

            Yeah, who gives a shit about the cultural history of humanity, am I right? After destroying paintings, maybe the can go after other things of cultural significance! Bulldoze the Great Serpent Mound! Blow up Angkor Wat! Carve rude words into the Elgin Marbles!

      • JaggedRobotPubes@lemmy.world
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        Society functioning in the way it’s currently functioning is the cause of the problem. It’s gonna stop because we change how we do things, or it’ll get stopped in a way we have no control over, which is worse across every possible metric.

    • rsuri@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Instead of intentionally pissing people off at climate protesters, put effort towards educating people on the myriad of ways we actually subsidize fossil fuels and the corrupt relationships that keep that going, so people instead get pissed off at the fossil fuel industry, lobbyists, and corrupt politicians.

      Of course some people do work on this already, Climate Town being a good example. We should be talking about those efforts instead of these.

      • webadict@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        “We do not need allies more devoted to order than to justice,” Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote in the spring of 1964, refusing calls from moderate Black and White leaders to condemn a planned highway “stall-in” to highlight systemic racism in New York City. “I hear a lot of talk these days about our direct action talk alienating former friends,” he added. “I would rather feel they are bringing to the surface latent prejudices that are already there. If our direct action programs alienate our friends … they never were really our friends.”

        “What’s blocking traffic have to do with racism? All it does is make people mad at black people!”

        History rhymes.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      And yet it damaged the frame, prevented people from enjoying a work of art and cost money from a museum that has nothing to do with the cause

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      I’m not sure it’s the acceptability that needs to be discussed here. In what way does this stop oil? The way you phrase your comment seems to presuppose that this is a useful action but some find it unacceptable. You’re skipping right over the main problem with this. Destroying art is not a useful act.

  • EldritchFeminity
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    2 months ago

    While I think this was a stupid way to go about risking jail time for a noble cause, I would like to remind everybody here of what everybody in the 60s thought about MLK and his peaceful protests:

    There never has nor will there ever be such a thing as “the right way to protest.” The right way to protest means out of sight where it can be conveniently ignored.

    • sensiblepuffin@lemmy.world
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      Interesting that you think this is stupid, yet you acknowledge that protests are inherently uncomfortable.

      People are talking about Just Stop Oil every time they pull one of these stunts. Sounds like they’re accomplishing their goals will bells on.

      • EldritchFeminity
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        I mean stupid as in “you might as well do something worth the punishment” or that they might have been better off blocking traffic through a major thoroughfare or something rather than possibly damaging a cultural artifact.

        I agree with the concept, just not this particular executation.

        • sensiblepuffin@lemmy.world
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          Uh… do you know what their punishment is for this? They usually get carted to the local jail, held for between a few hours and a few days, then released once the media have gone away. The offense is so minor that the punishment is the equivalent of getting lost in a corn maze. Usually, the JSO people are older people who don’t have much going on and so it’s literally no skin off their back if they have to sit in the local jail for a few days. (Also, UK jails are much more humane than US jails, so they don’t really suffer)

          See, I don’t think you do. I’m not trying to No True Scotsman you, but if you agree that protests inherently have to upset people a little bit, you can’t then turn around and say “but don’t upset us like this!”. You don’t get to pick and choose what protests are morally correct or even worth it - that’s the protestor’s job, not yours!

          • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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            While that’s often the punishment, this particular event was a repeat of a previous event that resulted in a two year prison sentence. At least that one particular judge is throwing the book at climate protesters for minor acts.

            • sensiblepuffin@lemmy.world
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              And why is that? At least partially because a) like it or not, oil barons have a lot of influence and b) people are whinging about it, which makes judges think that they’re doing the will of the people.

              • EldritchFeminity
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                This is why I said “you might as well do something worth the punishment.” In the US, protesting can get you more harsh sentences than crimes like assault or robbery. And not to “That’s, like, just your opinion, man” but…it’s just my opinion that their time would’ve been better spent blocking the street and holding up rush hour traffic or something for the punishment that they got. Like you said, it clearly worked because people are talking about it - and talking about it enough that the arguing in another post on this article got the post locked.

                I’m not here to rag on them. Again, there’s no “right way to protest,” and this is a noble cause to protest for.

                • Womble@lemmy.world
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                  Plummer was further sentenced to three months in jail for interfering with national infrastructure by taking part in a slow march along Earls Court Road in west London in November 2023. Her co-defendants in that case, Chiara Sarti and Daniel Hall, received community orders.

                  She did exactly what you suggested, except you havent heard about it because it doesnt generate media coverage, this does.

      • Brcht@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        They are being noticed, but I’m not sure they do more good than harm:

        Fossil fuel lobbies have long stopped trying to paint oil as good but rather environmentalism as bad, and activists as idiots.

        If you look at old pro-oil propaganda, say 80s-90s it was all about how great life is thank to oil and how bright the future of the oil-based economy was going to be, downplaying climate change and pollution related issues.

        Now they’re just engaging in mud throwing because their position is untenable.

        Going for the shock factor may just fuel their game.

      • rsuri@lemmy.world
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        Yeah but what are they saying when they’re talking? Most people are saying “look at these crazy climate people, something is clearly wrong with them”. Maybe the protesters should do something that makes people say “maybe we should care more about climate change” instead.

        This is a common problem I see with modern protests. Protesters of a certain other cause I won’t name spray-painted my neighborhood. I try to be a logical person, and logically I’d like to think my perspective on the issue they were spraypainting about is unaffected. But I can’t help but notice that on an emotional level, I really do not want to be on the same side as the people who disrespected me and my neighbors by spraypainting our neighborhood. To the point where if someone says they find that cause important, I actually feel a slight uncontrollable pang of disdain for them.

        I don’t think most people try to be as aware of how their emotions affects their thinking as I do.

        • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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          they said that about suffrage and women’s suffrage too.

          I feel like I’m starting to see way more sympathetic comments than I did a year ago.

      • scarabic@lemmy.world
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        Effective protests are uncomfortable. That doesn’t mean that any random act of vandalism is an effective protest. You’re trying to ask a relationship transitive which is not transitive.

    • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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      I agree except that potential damage to historical pieces makes me extremely upset.

      I would prefer they ACTUALLY riot to that.

      … and, in fact, that would probably be much more effective.

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        They tried protesting at oil infrastructure, they stopped multiple oil terminals in the UK being used for weeks and caused shortages in various parts of the UK. Hundreds went to prison and everyone forgot about it after a week.

        They throw soup at glass, 2 people go to a police station for a few days and people are still talking about it months later.

        Unfortunately, they have to exist within the constraints of modern news media, outrage cycles and social media, and that influences their decisions.

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          People are mostly talking about what a bunch of idiots they are though.

          This lot look like they were cast by the daily mail, they couldn’t be more of a caricature. It is absolutely not effective communication.

          • Barbarian@sh.itjust.works
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            Those look like 3 random people to me. I’m not seeing the caricature. For them to not be caricatures, what would you expect them to look like?

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          I understand they used to protest for climate action, but now they’re just nutcases making it harder for the rest of us.

          I guess good for them that they got their moment of attention, but not all attention is good attention. Especially over here in the US, it’s hard enough getting half the population to care about the environment, and now they’re just dismiss it as “those nutcases”. This does not help anyone.

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        I mean JSO never actually tried to damage historical pieces. The paintings are behind glass

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      What you’re really saying is that no effective protest will ever be welcomed as acceptable.

      But the way you say it, that there will never be a right way, begs another question: just because legitimate protests will be called wrong, does that mean that all protests are right?

      I don’t think so. This is a random act of destruction. I personally find it disgusting to compare this to MLK’s mass demonstrations.

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        My argument is not “if a protest is uncomfortable, then it is effective”.

        It is “how can you in the same comment say ‘this is a stupid way to go about risking jail for a noble cause’ and ‘there never has nor will there ever be such a thing as “the right way to protest”’?”.

        • scarabic@lemmy.world
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          Well. If you’re going to bring out that argument regardless of how stupid, destructive, and ineffective the protest is, then I’m afraid your argument turns into that first one.

          I’m going to go shit down the throat of a golden retriever in front of the White House to protest oil. Are you going to block and tackle for me, reminding my critics that effective protests are always uncomfortable? I’m just probing to see if you will just automatically say that or if you are evaluating the situation before saying it.

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            Sorry, I wasn’t aware that animal abuse is on the same level of inanity as throwing soup at a painting. You’re being insanely disingenuous.

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              Oh did I make you uncomfortable? I must be stopping oil.

              Don’t hold you opinion so tightly that you start to believe anyone who disagrees with you must be being disingenuous. That’s a little free life advice. Animal abuse and vandalism are both crimes, as is destroying cultural artifacts. So do you want to explain to me in what way they are NOT on the same level?

              If I run a red light wearing a “no oil” t shirt, is that a protest?

          • sensiblepuffin@lemmy.world
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            I’m not even going to wait for you to come up with a new angle to come at me with.

            I award you the Useful Idiot Ribbon.

            • scarabic@lemmy.world
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              Disingenuous, useful idiot… any other terms you heard online and don’t understand how to use properly? Words have meanings. They are not mere talismans to wave at someone.

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    To everyone in this thread who has nothing but insults for these activists, what are you doing against climate breakdown? Besides sitting on your couch, insulting people who are actually trying to make a difference, facing jail time?

    You are the kind of people who would’ve called the Suffragettes names and said they’re hurting the cause, as well.

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      Compared to what they’ve accomplished by getting some plexiglass wet, it seems like sitting on my couch has accomplished the same. Maybe more by staying home, unless they rode bikes or walked to do the deed.

      • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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        No, no, you see, all attention is good attention, and attention is the most valuable thing to the climate change movement right now. That’s the issue. Not enough people are AWARE that it’s a THING. If they were, we would be making much more progress than we currently are.

        /s

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          Not enough people are AWARE that it’s a THING.

          I mean, considering how little has happened?
          Don’t we need radicals at this point?

          Isn’t it said that violence is the language of the unheard?

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            I’m down with violence, man. But human history and culture isn’t the enemy here, it shouldn’t be the target, and simply ‘raising awareness’ is no longer the goal. Take a sledgehammer to an oil exec’s front door if you want to go the direct action route, not to the Magna Carta.

            There are actually probably more effective uses of violence than the oil exec’s front door. But you get what I mean, I hope. Action alone is not enough, it must be action that causes something useful to the cause, like increasing fear in the politicos or ultra-wealthy (as the Suffragists did with arson and bombing campaigns targeting both), or reducing the effectiveness of society as a whole until negotiations are had (as with a general strike, though that’s not violent, generally).

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              Human history and culture are leverage. The fact that people care about them is why they’re valuable.

              Take a sledgehammer to an oil exec’s front door

              Yeah, go for it. I support you.

              it must be action that causes something useful to the cause,

              Public attention can spur recruitment waves for the targets you really care about. If any campaign is to be effective, you need people to know who you are.

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          If some soup on plexiglass can convince you to let the planet burn, you were never on the side of progress.

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            This right here. For shame on anyone who genuinely thinks they’re on the right side of history, whining about soup on a Plexiglas barrier.

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            If some soup on plexiglass can convince you to let the planet burn, you were never on the side of progress.

            I’m not the one that needs convincing. But I’m sure the majority that you actually need on your side are simply insufficiently pure, and a bunch of reactionary dogs anyway, so who cares about gaining their approval for the cause?

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        Propose something better then. Or better yet, do it.

        • scarabic@lemmy.world
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          Literally anything is better than this. Taking the bus one day a month instead of driving is better than this.

          Arguably, this action is negative because it discredits climate activists.

          I get that you care about oil. That’s great. Now care about effectiveness for 60 seconds and you’ll realize that this is not a hill to die on.

    • Destide@feddit.uk
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      I ride my bike 24 miles a day every weekday of the year , use hugle culture and no dig in my garden, recycle that’s just the start do one, they’re virtue signalling twats.

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        Great, you’re reducing your personal impact. That’s a great start. I’m sure our politicians will think of your hugle culture and recycling when they sign the next gas drilling licenses. We can’t ‘individual action’ our way out of this one.

        And btw, I’m sure the activists do their recycling too.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      Solared my house. Converted to LED lights. Invested in insulation. Consistently supported political candidates against fracking in primary races. Voted as liberally as possible in general elections. Bought electric car. Home battery. Systematically reduced power usage throughout the house. Systematically looked for ways to reduce plastic usage.

      But that’s just a start. Next month I’m going to slop soup on a painting and REALLY make a difference.

  • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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    1. It was covered by glass, unclutch your fucking pearls already.

    2. Van Gogh is my favorite painter, and I would still rather have a habitable planet for future generations than have Sunflowers. If you’re more mad about this than you are about what big oil and gas companies are doing, sit down and have a good hard think about where your priorities are. I do not give a shit if you “agree with their message but not their tactics” or if you “think it makes the cause look bad” or whatever other bullshit you want to spew to cover your ass right now. Ultimately, if this caused you to feel a greater sense of righteous anger than the wholesale destruction of our environment for profit does, you are part of the problem. I’d rather side with the people who are trying to make a difference, even if I don’t like how they do it, than side with the people plundering our world for personal gain.

    • caseyweederman@lemmy.ca
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      Van Gogh died penniless, right? He’d probably be cheering. “Oh no, rich people will be slightly less able to profit off of my work?”

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      I would still rather have a habitable planet for future generations than have Sunflowers

      What a laughable false dilemma.

      I’d rather side with the people who are trying to make a difference

      Your instinct is laudable. Where your judgment is failing you is that these are not people who are making a difference. Stop straining to make something meaningful out of a random act of vandalism. The tiniest act of actual divestment from oil would be more meaningful than slopping soup at a painting. Take the bus one day a month instead of driving. That’s a difference.

  • BrightCandle@lemmy.world
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    I see a lot of confusion and misinformation in the comments about what Just Stop Oils demands are. Their website makes it very plain and you can read through the details yourself. The press has massively misrepresented the groups demands and goals so its best to read it for yourself. https://juststopoil.org/

    These are the 3 demands they have.

    ✅ Demand 1: No New Oil and Gas Licences – WON!

    🔥 Demand 2: Just Stop Oil by 2030.

    🧡 We need a Fossil Fuel Treaty.

    • Demand 1 they only just won when the UK government changed to Labour who have committed the first item, so all their previous actions were with the goal of not expanding yet further the use of fossil fuels.
    • Demand 2 is to phase the use of fossil fuels out by 2030. The UK has a net zero goal of 2035 so this would bring that goal earlier but many other countries have a 2030 target in the EU.
    • Demand 3 is all about trying to get a world wide treaty signed to stop the use of oil to try and meet the Paris agreement to keep within 1.5C.

    There is no immediate demand to stop or anything so extreme, they are largely what the UK has already agreed to do but is failing to achieve.

    • sfbing@lemmy.world
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      Cool. But the goals are almost beside the point. This action makes people associate goals that I agree with, with being an asshole.

    • ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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      2030 is insanely fast for no oil, it’s also way more aggressive than what the UK is planning. Net 0 emissions is different than no oil. Net 0 emissions means you still use a bunch of oil but claim planting a bunch of trees or an algae farm cancels it out. Net 0 emissions doesn’t mean stop using oil based products like plastic either. No oil is totally a different demand.

      Also UK doesn’t plan on net 0 emissions until 2050, 2035 is just massive reduction in transportation emissions.

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      That sort of comment could be used to justify an unbelievable amount of vandalism and terror and is just not productive

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        We should value the Earth more than art. If vandalism of paintings bothers people more than the destruction of the Earth then they should reexamine their priorities. No to mention, the vandalism of the art is imagined, the painting is undamaged, but the damage to the planet is real. On top of that, if we do nothing to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions then the damage to the planet will continue to worsen.

  • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    Just Stop Oil activists throw soup at Van Gogh’s Sunflowers plastic sheet after fellow protesters jailed

    I dunno why these newspapers constantly print these phony headlines… Oh wait. It’s the clickbait and propaganda obviously.

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    Hot take: I swear a lot of these kinds of “protests” are funded by the oil companies themsleves to make climate activists look like crazy crackpots easy for the media and average Joe to dismiss. Like with the Stonehenge paint bullshit. Really?

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      I agree. I think these people are serving as “useful idiots”. They don’t know they’re being manipulated by oil interests. Ther think they are fighting the good fight. They are undoubtedly benefiting those they claim to be against.

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        Oil companies are manipulating these people into being against climate change?

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      It wouldn’t be the strangest thing that has happened. It’s actually quite logical.

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        Aileen Getty is a philanthropist who inherited money and has nothing to do with the oil company. Her father and the rest of her family sold their stake when she was young. This is just a convenient conspiracy for oil companies to spread because people just fucking slurp it up without the minimum due diligence.

    • JustARaccoon@lemmy.world
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      Because then it’s a violent protest and you won’t hear the end of it from the conservatives. It’s been p much proven that any action is better than no action, and them sitting outside a single persons home would be inefficient and also potentially harassment.

      Also it doesn’t help that reporting around this stuff conveniently misses the parts where all of their actions are easily reversible and non damaging. If anything it shows how corrupt the media empire is

    • Adanisi@lemmy.zip
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      They have a history of blocking oil terminals. All it achieves is much less media coverage and a quick stop to it.

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      I don’t remember where, but I’ve read they’re funded by oil companies. I think it’s actually surprisingly effective, because generating outrage is the point of demonstrations like this. Also, iirc, all their targets so far have been behind protective barriers, so no real damage either. Should they be inconveniencing oil execs? Sure! (I’d honestly prefer if they [comment cannot legally be completed], but that’s probably asking too much.) But their current strategy gets more attention, and more attention gets better awareness. No one cares about a rich asshole. Everyone cares about world-famous art.

  • RvTV95XBeo@sh.itjust.works
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    I know Lemmy has mixed feelings here, but I personally applaud these activists for risking prison time to draw attention to a major existential threat.

    I find it quite entertaining to see all the art aficionados coming out so shook by them getting a little bit of soup onto some plexiglass and a picture frame that they probably couldn’t even describe before these incidents. Close your eyes, Is it walnut or cherry? Painted or oil finished? Ornate or simple? 5 or 7 inches wide? Symmetrical or asymmetrical along a horizontal axis?

    These protests, which thus far have involved basically zero actual damage of cultural significance have driven significantly more attention (good and bad) to their cause than anything else that has been done. Their protests are non-violent and generally nondestructive.

    That said, the real crime here is the judge sentencing 2 years in prison for getting some soup on the frame of a painting - I don’t support violent protests, but I’m pretty sure you could just go around and slap oil CEOs in the face for a fraction of the sentence.

    • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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      Slapping oil CEOs in the face would be much more relevant, and not be targeting irreplaceable cultural artifacts.

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        irreplaceable cultural artifacts

        I mean it won’t be exactly the same, but I’m pretty sure they can buy more of that plexiglass that got soup’d. Calling plexiglass a cultural artifact feels like a bit of a stretch, but I do think it’s replaceable.

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          Just so we’re on the same page here, would this act have been acceptable to you or unacceptable if the painting had actually been damaged?

          Frame of paintings like that isn’t simply replaceable, by the way, it’s also an artifact that’s generations old. It’s just less important than the painting itself.

          • RvTV95XBeo@sh.itjust.works
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            Depends on your definition of ‘damage’ - if a drop of soup gets under the plexiglass, I’m not clutching any pearls. If the paintings were completely destroyed, I would not be supportive.

            That said its a moot point because these headline grabbing demonstrations have been nondestructive. Stonehenge is fine. The sunflowers will continue to be sunflowery.

            • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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              Depends on your definition of ‘damage’ - if a drop of soup gets under the plexiglass, I’m not clutching any pearls.

              I would, personally, but history, human heritage, and art are all precious topics to me. You don’t damage 100+ years of history by an artist so groundbreaking that he is a household name to this day just to get your name in the papers.

              If the paintings were completely destroyed, I would not be supportive.

              So your primary reason for remaining supportive of this is that the security systems worked perfectly. You do not approve of destroying priceless artifacts to raise attention to climate change and/or think that it would be counterproductive, also correct?

              • RvTV95XBeo@sh.itjust.works
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                You don’t damage 100+ years of history by an artist so groundbreaking that he is a household name to this day just to get your name in the papers.

                They didn’t.

      • sensiblepuffin@lemmy.world
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        Slapping a CEO in the face is assault. That’s a serious offense in most countries, and it would be extremely easy to get sent to jail for years.

        Throwing soup at a painting that’s behind Plexiglas is, at most, disturbing the peace and vandalizing a museum’s floor.

  • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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    “I chose to peacefully disrupt a business-as-usual system that is unjust, dishonest and murderous.”

    Ah, yes, the murderous system of [checks notes] art made generations before you were born.

  • Destide@feddit.uk
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    My tin hat tingles with these guys they’re either too upper middle-class to actually understand the real world or they’re making sure climate activists are a running joke.

    • JovialMicrobial@lemm.ee
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      I see your point, I do. But I also see theirs. There will be no one around in the future to enjoy or make art if we continue fucking up the world with fossil fuels the way we are.

      Maybe it’d be better to walk around posting little signs on the paintings descriptions with a catch phrase like “like art? Stop fossil fuels” then a little blurb about how there’ll be no art in the future if there is no future.

      That’s probably how I’d handle it, maybe even try to work with the museum so the signs wouldnt get taken down. But, that doesn’t get media attention. It’d never end up in the news. Maybe after contacting 50 museums it’d get a small mention, but ultimately no one would care.

      Our current news cycles don’t encourage people to act civilly when trying to be heard. So that’s why this sort of extreme behavior keeps happening. It’s a vicious feedback loop and just like climate change we don’t seem to be making any moves to stop it.

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        Here are a few reasons why thats not true

        1. People talking about these guys being dumbasses does not equate to people taking climate change seriously.

        2. There is limited bandwidth for publicity, these morons are taking publicity away from people actively doing the research, enacting changes, building things the help mitigate climate change.

        3. They give the opportunity for climate change deniers to lump all climate change activists together with these idiots, allowing them to replace the message of “Act against climate change” to look at all these dumbass climate change activists.

        • petrol_sniff_king
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          I’m taking it seriously. Are you not taking it seriously?

          are taking publicity away

          And this is being published where?
          Here’s my challenge to you: every time you see Just Stop Oil pop up, post these articles. Get people excited about actually doing something.

          They give the opportunity for climate change deniers to lump all climate change activists together with these idiots

          Deniers are too far gone. You spray paint stone henge, they complain about the lichen. You splash color on a ferrari dealership, they complain about the small business owners. You bomb an oil rig, they say that violence never solves anything. They’re already not on our side.

  • FinishingDutch@lemmy.world
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    These people are utter cunts.

    All this does is annoy people and potentially damage the actual art. If they threw soup at oil execs or something, at least it’d be somewhat related to their message. But attacking paintings does nothing.

    If I saw that in a museum, I’d punch them in the mouth.

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      We know perfectly well that the art is behind glass and will not be damaged because they did it before. So it’s complete nonsense to say that it will potentially destroy the art.

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      Didn’t they throw it at a protective barrier, though? So zero potential of damaging the art?
      Throwing soup at an oil exec is assault on a human being and would be worse, ethically, because human beings have sensory apparatuses and, presumably at least some level of emotion.
      If you punched someone in the mouth because they threw soup at a protective plastic barrier in a museum, then it is you who would be the “utter cunt”.

    • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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      The oil execs thank you for giving them soup while punching climate protesters in the mouth.

    • BigAssFan@lemmy.world
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      You are the utter cunt here yourself, with your short-sighted opinion. Can’t you see the parallel in polluting something of value? Like is being done to our planet? And those people’s grandchildren will be even more annoyed when they have hardly any food left, with weather catastrophies ruining their existence. OK, that was a bit harsh, but you catch my drift.