• @seacocker@lemmy.world
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    2268 months ago

    I have come here for a climate demonstration, not a political view

    What he really means is that he only wants to hear about one slice of a political view, or he doesn’t understand that climate change is a political subject too.

    • DarkGamer
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      8 months ago

      He probably means he disagrees with her about this issue and didn’t show up to support a pro-Palestine rally.

      • BraveSirZaphod
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        238 months ago

        I’ve been told that if your protest isn’t disruptive, it’s not really a protest, so I’m sure everyone here will be fully understanding and supportive of this guy for standing up for his beliefs /s

        • Jaytreeman
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          368 months ago

          Not all beliefs are created equal. You can respect people without respecting their beliefs.

            • @betheydocrime@lemmy.world
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              228 months ago

              I think the difference between these two situations is the disruption of commerce.

              Capitalists do not give a shit about protests until the protests start affecting their bottom line. That’s why blocking freeways is such a big deal–it speaks to them in a language that they understand. It’s effective not because John Q Taxpayer can’t get to work on time, but because Corporation Q Capital-owner can’t exploit John’s labor without his butt in his seat and without trucks full of resources coming in regularly. Corporations lose much, much more than regular people do when commerce is disrupted.

              Grabbing the microphone like is disruptive, but it does not disrupt commerce. If anything, it shows that his goal is to deplatform someone (someone whose platform is the very reason he is there tonight, by his own admission) or to elevate his own platform.

        • @Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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          98 months ago

          Whoever told you that, stop listening to them. An effective protest is one that expresses your views, and ideally changes people’s minds and builds support for your cause. Disrupting people’s lives is typically counterproductive to actually gaining support.

          • @helenslunch@feddit.nl
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            88 months ago

            The only way to be heard is to burn down your neighbor’s businesses and rob Target! And if you do anything to protect your livelihood you’re just a right wing nut job!

            • @Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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              98 months ago

              There are genuinely people who think like that. To be fair, the George Floyd protests/riots changed things in a way that peaceful protest had so far failed to do.

              • @helenslunch@feddit.nl
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                78 months ago

                Some minor progress was made because of the millions of people who turned out to peacefully protest. Those who rioted and destroyed shit only contributed ammunition to the opposition.

                • @Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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                  128 months ago

                  I disagree, I think having an entire block burnt down made a lot of people decide they don’t want to see this happen again, in a way a regular protest wouldn’t have.

    • @MTK@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I’m gonna get downvoted for this but this is just wrong.

      Climate change is science, not politics. We are trying to address it from multiple angles at the aame time (such as political angles, scientific angles, lifestyle angles, etc)

      So the fight to make our politicians accept that climate change is sceince and not politics is, ironically, a political fight but climate change and the movments to stop it are not only political.

    • BerührtGras
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      288 months ago

      No it’s not! Fighting climate change can be addressed as legitimate issue to fix from both sides of the political spectrum. Talking about the gaza conflict and picking an arbitrary side, does nothing except, drive potential fff supporters away. People will hate Greta and everything she stands for even more. Only for virtue signaling points on social media.

      • @LadyAutumn
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        358 months ago

        Nah. She is spot on when she says that a movement for climate justice cannot ignored the marginalized, the oppressed, and those fighting for justice and freedom.

        Those who would hate her for being anti-genocide and anti-apartheid are already very unlikely to be allies to the climate justice movement, a movement that highlights the way that impoverished peoples and nations, especially non-white non-european equatorial and global south nations, are uniquely suffering the consequences of climate change.

        • @jochem@lemmy.ml
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          88 months ago

          I don’t see a connection between climate justice and justice for Palestinians, other than that it’s both about justice. Could you elaborate why it’s necessary to bring these seemingly unrelated struggles for justice together?

          I btw totally see how a lot of social justice is tied to climate justice, but specifically the Palestinian struggle seems totally unrelated. Happy to change my mind.

          • @zbyte64
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            27 months ago

            I mean there’s definitely geopolitical implications in this conflict and it happens to be in a region where there are wars for oil.

        • BerührtGras
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          78 months ago

          But this is such self pleasuring ineffective rhetoric. People in the first world which is the group you wanna adress. So western (not necessaryly white) rich people who enjoying their comforts in the first world. If you want them to actually do something. Like sell their car and become vegan. You have to show them climate change hitting their home turf. Pictures like Italy and Greece Burning for Europeans, smoke covered NYC, etc. If you talk about a “climate justice” movement, in which the main message is, “dont you care about the brown poor people?” you denigrate this catastrophy as an UNICEF Donation event. No one will give up their SUV for that.

          Now the Gaza Conflict is complex and polarizing for muslims and Israel supporters, in which you can only make a bad choice, people will turn away and ignore whatever you are trying to sell.

          • @LadyAutumn
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            148 months ago

            Greta, like many climate activists, is not appealing to rich people. Rich people will never comply with climate regulations. They are almost all sociopaths who do not fucking care if global warming continues to worsen or not. Greta is appealing to the people of the world, people of the working class. There are many of us and the rich are very few. Billionaires and the wealthy will have to be forced to stop destroying the environment by the nation’s they exist in.

            She’s also a socialist. As most climate activists are. We don’t give a shit what rich people think. They should be forced to comply. They will never comply of their free will.

            • BerührtGras
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              8 months ago

              This is such a deranged worldview. Progressive liberals and leftists are the rich people! California is a democratic bastion and filled to the brim with progressives and its one of the richest states in the nation. George Soros and Bill Gates support progressive causes. How can you not see that. And shes is definitely not pondering to working class people. Because working class people support political parties which have climate change denying tendencies. Like the republican party and the afd in germany.

              Another example from my home turf. Bavaria is the richest state in Germany. BUT also very conservative. Wealth is concentrated around munich. The wider you go away from munich. The “poorer” the population. Last month were the state elections of Bavaria. And the turnout in Munich was nearly 50% for the green party. The wider you distanced yourself from it, the more right wing parties profited. Which used anti green bashing as their main rhetoric. Poor working class people dont vote green en masse.

              • @LadyAutumn
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                148 months ago

                Conservative economic policy is literally, entirely, “make the country nicer for rich people”.

                Socialism centre’s working class people. It advocates for the dismantling and end of the upper class. Rich people should have their wealth taken from them and redistributed to the people. Socialism is the polar opposite of an ideology of the rich. At its most radical Socialism advocates for… getting rid of the rich people by any means necessary. That’s all I’ll say on that.

                Leftism is based around the tenants of Socialism. George Soros and Bill Gates are capitalists. Capitalism is why they are wealthy. Conservatism and more broadly neoliberalism (the modern day ideology of most Conservative and liberal parties) promotes capitalism and the free market. Rich people are decidedly neoliberal. Socialism stands in direct opposition to neoliberalism, advocating instead for heavy regulation of every single industry and the public acquisition of all infrastructure and industry. This would be taking the rich people’s assets, their companies, their means of production, and nationalizing them such that they are collectively owned and benefited from by everyone.

                Liberals and Conservatives are identical in terms of economic policy. They only differ in terms of how authoritarian they believe the government should be, and how much minorities should be made to suffer in society. Economically they are the exact same. Look at Biden, for example. Look at new labor. Liberals and conservatives are largely allies, and their best friends are rich people. Leftists seek a society where rich people do not exist.

      • @NAXLAB@lemmy.world
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        138 months ago

        I think you might be narrowing the definition of politics. Something is political not just when two arbitrary political “sides” disagree. Something is a political issue when government policy is involved, and Greta is absolutely in the business of changing government policy. Climate change is also a political issue because it does create a divide among political groups: the rich and the poor. The people who own the most stuff will profit from irresponsible pollution, and have the most means to avoid its consequences. They will be using their political power to make sure things stay that way. The poor will suffer.

    • @PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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      248 months ago

      As Hbomb said, “People who say they don’t like politics in games actually like politics in games the most, they just wish they were seeing different politics in games, and that’s who Caesar’s Legion is here to stroke off!”

  • Rentlar
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    1088 months ago

    She’s never been afraid to speak her mind. How do we address the issue of climate change, if we turn a blind eye to the suffering of innocent people and children done intentionally for vengeance’s sake?

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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      698 months ago

      War is terrible for the climate. All that extra fuel burning, and in machines not designed to do it efficiently

      • @AnarchoDakosaurus@toast.ooo
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        508 months ago

        Not to mention all the destruction of farms, the poisoning of water sources, all the destroyed vehicles and rotting corpses of men and animals alike laid everywhere.

        They will be calling this the 2nd Nakba. Not only is it a massacre of the people, the Palestinians last remaining lands have been salted. Gaza looks like Stalingrad.

        It is an entirely man made disaster. Or state made disaster if you will.

      • @LadyAutumn
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        188 months ago

        It is extremely valuable. She has a powerful voice and far-reaching influence. She is using her voice to advocate for the voiceless. Israel is an apartheid state, and they must be held accountable for the crimes against humanity they are committing and have historically committed against the people and nation of Palestine.

        • BerührtGras
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          58 months ago

          No as I explained above this is nonsensical virtue signaling.

          • @LadyAutumn
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            8 months ago

            You can’t just spout off a buzz word as tho it’s an actual argument.

            She’s standing with Palestine against those who are mass murdering them. She has powerful influence. Her choosing to say this legitimately will influence public opinion.

            • BerührtGras
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              68 months ago

              No it wont. Greta is the climate lady. And if the climate lady says stuff which i disagress with, i wont listen to the climate lady anymore. I even hate the climate lady now.

              • @LadyAutumn
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                118 months ago

                Greta is one of the most influential people of her entire generation. She is a powerful orator who has already had major impacts on climate policy around the world, and she has a massive audience.

                You’re not the entirety of the world.

                • @Ilovethebomb@lemm.ee
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                  38 months ago

                  She is a powerful orator who has already had major impacts on climate policy around the world,

                  I really don’t think she’s as important as you think she is, or anywhere near as influential.

              • @zbyte64
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                27 months ago

                Is this satire?

      • Rentlar
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        78 months ago

        Not sure why you think it’s valueless. Bringing up the mere topic of Palestine suffering gets your mic taken away, prosecuted and look at like a Hamas sympathizer. It’s as much virtue signalling as getting arrested blocking the entrance of an oil conference - as in it’s not.

        Wars tend to lead to built and natural areas alike getting razed, it’s a huge waste of resources and lives. And what for? Political gain? Money for the Military Industrial Complex? All those vehicles except for drones use fossil fuel, and rightwing governments rallying support over wars definitely don’t give a rat’s ass for the climate. So in summary, the Gaza issue and yhe climate are definitely related.

  • Roflmasterbigpimp
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    8 months ago

    I don’t think this was a smart Move to mix these two issues. Israel & Palestine are so extremely polarizing and mixing this with climate might divide the People and weaken the fight for a green future. For example I would rather avoid that topic. I don’t know enough about Palestine/Israel to publicly debate it. And if my climate-rally somehow turns to pro Palestine or pro Israel I would rather abstain from visiting it. Because I dont have a solid View on this topic. And I think I might not be alone with this feeling.

    • @TotallynotJessica@lemmy.world
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      377 months ago

      and people told MLK Jr. similar things when he spoke out against the Vietnam War. Activists fundamentally fight for justice, and as King said, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” It might make sense in the short term to look the other way and conform, but when something so terrible happens due to actions from a western ally, it’s good in the long term to have principles.

    • @Nevoic@lemm.ee
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      338 months ago

      Activists don’t need to be one-track minded. They rarely are. I’m a vegan, socialist, anti-fascist who is against the ethnic cleansing of Palestinians and for climate justice globally. There’s very strong overlap in these positions. There’s a reason you won’t find a lot of Republican vegans, or pro-Israel socialists.

      Yes, sometimes people don’t put in the time to investigate these issues, and I commend you for knowing the limits of your own knowledge, I’ve recommended to people before that it’s better to just say “I don’t know enough about this issue” instead of arriving at an under-researched position. However, it’s not necessary to criticize people who are actually activists, learn about these issues, and go out into the world and advocate for change, so long as they’re advocating for the right thing.

      The topic being brought up might ostracize people, but it will also put the topic into people’s minds. People like you might not know what the correct position is here, but you hear the constant pro-Israel propaganda pumped out by the U.S and might arrive at a subconscious conclusion that aligns with the imperial core.

      If you hear people speaking out against the apartheid state of Israel, especially people who align with your values, you might be inclined to look into it more, or at the very least not automatically accept U.S propaganda on the issue.

      • TheHarpyEagle
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        338 months ago

        I have to disagree, the activists that really get things done do have a one-track mind, because it takes a lot of energy, money, and time to make any progress in just one issue. You can certainly care about many things, but you can’t go to every conference, cover every issue in your speech, raise money for every cause, etc.

      • Roflmasterbigpimp
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        8 months ago

        Again. It creates divergence and weakens the awareness for the core Issue of this specific rally and might drive people away from it.

        EDIT: Btw. it’s pretty bold of you to assume you know what “the right thing” is especially on such an highly complex and diverse topic like Israel/Gaza.

      • @5BC2E7@lemmy.world
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        47 months ago

        This is what they mean when they say that the left will eat it’s own. Some of them share this view and they don’t want to seek consensus on topics we agree to advance their goals. Instead they demand that others support all their beliefs.

    • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      197 months ago

      I think the far left and far right have a similar problem here, in that you have to be “all in” on the group’s talking points, for danger of being ostracised by your peers.

    • @dzire187@feddit.de
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      68 months ago

      I don’t think this was a smart Move.

      So, according to you it wasn’t a smart move to grab the mic, and basically say what you’re saying in this comment?

      Did you, by any chance, not read beyond the headline?

      • Roflmasterbigpimp
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        318 months ago

        It was not a smart move to mix the two issues. Did you, by any chance, not read beyond my first sentence?

    • @MuuuaadDib@lemm.ee
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      37 months ago

      We need to have clean air and water to see the burning of the cities we have genocide in, we need to make a better world to kill other because of where they were born and what sky God they choose.

  • Kalash
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    8 months ago

    Muddling up these two issues is so very stupid … just keep the climate message on climate, how fucking hard is that?

    • @Sunforged@lemmy.ml
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      838 months ago

      The driving force of climate change is the same reason for the military industrial complexe. Profits over people will always lead to these outcomes. You gotta be able to acknowledge and discuss this stuff.

      • DarkGamer
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        228 months ago

        It didn’t seem like she was opposing the military industrial complex in general so much as she was opposing Israel specifically, showing solidarity with those in opposition to them, and implying they are oppressors opposed to freedom and justice.

        • @xkforce@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Shes not wrong.

          Hamas are terrorists but the Israeli government’s hands are far from clean. You cant kill 10,000 palestinians in a matter of weeks, half of which are children, and maintain the moral high ground. And that is ignoring how modern Israel came about through the displacement of millions.

          • DarkGamer
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            198 months ago

            Who has the moral high ground in this conflict is a matter of opinion, you might be surprised what you would support if you and your loved ones were under constant threat of violence with no end in sight. Hamas has leveraged public distaste for civilian casualties quite effectively, maximizing it by hiding among them, and leaving Israel without other viable strategies to depose them.

            I find myself far more sympathetic to Israel’s cause because they weren’t the ones that provoked this, their opponents clearly have less concern for civilian lives than they do but simply lack the means, Palestinian factions openly advocate for genocide of Jews, and have remained belligerent and unwilling to sue for viable peace for the last 70 years despite having lost every war they’ve waged on Israel. Israel has historically shown a great deal of restraint dealing with them for a very long time, but each wanton massacre moves them closer to seeking safety at any cost, even if that cost is many civilian lives.

            It’s easy to feel sympathy for the underdog, but in this case, the underdog is explicitly genocidal, expects to be treated differently than they treat their opponents, which they constantly provoke with guerrilla attacks, while remaining unwilling to compromise for peace. I’m at a loss as to what other options are available to Israel that provides them meaningful safety without sacrificing their own people or national sovereignty.

            • ivanafterall
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              438 months ago

              you might be surprised what you would support if you and your loved ones were under constant threat of violence with no end in sight.

              Congratulations, you understand Hamas.

              • DarkGamer
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                118 months ago

                Hamas could end this conflict tomorrow if willing to return their hostages, make concessions and sue for a viable peace.

                • @4am@lemm.ee
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                  208 months ago

                  They are, and the IDF decided to bomb hospitals instead.

                  I’m no Hamas fan, but you’re really doing some mental gymnastics if you think that’s an appropriate response.

                • FaceDeer
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                  178 months ago

                  Because giving up has worked so well for Palestinians before.

                  I don’t support Hamas’ actions, but I too understand them. The Palestinians have been abused for generations with no good way out in sight for them. They don’t have the power to make any real decisions or changes to the status quo here. It’s up to the side with power to figure out some way to make this work out better.

                • @SlikPikker@lemmy.ca
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                  98 months ago

                  Will the Settlement expansion stop and roll back? No?

                  If they had left kids alone - even crying over their parents mutilated bodies - I would have supported their action fully.

                • Karyoplasma
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                  27 months ago

                  The conflict hasn’t started on October 7th. The conflict started way before Hamas even existed.

            • @xkforce@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              Israel exists because millions were displaced from their homes to create it. Settlers continually encroach further. And everyone that lived there is supposed to roll over and let it happen with no resistance whatsoever. Then there’s the current situation which is to put it lightly, a humanitarian disaster. Over a million gazans were essentially told to flee to the south or risk being bombed. And dont get me started on how journalists are being treated. Do not give me this poor innocent Israel horseshit.

              • DarkGamer
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                88 months ago

                The Nakba land was annexed because they declared war on Israel and lost. It’s almost like there’s consequences for trying to murder your neighbors. They might not want you as neighbors anymore.

                • @xkforce@lemmy.world
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                  318 months ago

                  You are a ghoul if you think displacing a few million people from their homes in revenge is justified.

            • Dojan
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              8 months ago

              It’s seriously hard to take anything pro-Israel seriously knowing that they have a state-sponsored crowdsourced propaganda project where people undertake missions to spread pro-Israel propaganda, and smear Palestine.

              Like for all we know your comment could’ve come straight from ACT-IL

              • DarkGamer
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                8 months ago

                Yes indeed. Both sides are heavily propagandizing social media so it’s good to be skeptical and insist on credible sources. Here’s an article about a pro-Palestine disinformation campaign on twitter trying to get Americans to stay out of the conflict, for example. I wouldn’t assume everyone who disagrees with you is a paid shill, nor would I assume that those who agree with you aren’t; I find it’s better to stick to the issues at hand than try to divine the motivations of random internet strangers.

                Also, I suspect things are probably better here in that regard than on other platforms, as the feddiverse is still flying under the radar for those seeking to shape public opinion.

                • Dojan
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                  88 months ago

                  I never said anything about paid shill. Here’s a video where someone walks through the app. I don’t think people get paid, but they do earn badges and points and whatnot for spreading propaganda and mass-reporting content that’s posted to the app.

                  Thing is, I don’t have a horse in this race. Looking on from the outside what’s happening is disgusting, be it using hospitals as shields, thereby endangering people there, or turning off access to water to over two million people. There’s no right side here.

                  There’s also fuck all I can do about it so I generally just keep out of things. It’s not my mess to deal with.

      • @zacher_glachl@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        You gotta be able to acknowledge and discuss this stuff.

        If the only way to advocate for climate action is to also try and turn people into pacifist commies, we can just stop trying.

        edit: the laughable failure to understand basic human psychology in this thread, lmao

        • @Sunforged@lemmy.ml
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          288 months ago

          “I can give up fossil fuels, or I can stop slaughtering innocents but fuck you if you want both.”

          • @5BC2E7@lemmy.world
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            48 months ago

            Let me put it in simpler terms. I can do the right thing as long as it doesn’t require me to do something very wrong. Then it would be wrong.

    • @Doorbook@lemmy.world
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      448 months ago

      What funny is both issue are extremely linked.

      Earlier this year, Isreal sign an agreement with Lebanon to help explore the area for gas and oil.

      Isreal anounced a new middle East to supply eroupe with gas.

      Iareal on October 19 or around ot awarded 12 companies the ability to explore gas and oil in the region.

      The only thing that was stopping them is Hamas.

      The expected value goes over 400 billion in the last few years, as expressed in a report by the UN about the gas field there.

      • Kalash
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        148 months ago

        What funny is both issue are extremely linked.

        They are not. It’s a tiny region of the world and it’s ridiculous to even bring a climate consideration into such a conflict.

        The only thing that was stopping them is Hamas.

        Yes, and Hitler really liked dogs and Nazis did a lot for animal welfare. Fuck off.

        • @gaylord_fartmaster@lemmy.world
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          228 months ago

          Imagine thinking the Middle East, a “tiny region” which also just so happens to be where more than half of all oil used on Earth comes from, is irrelevant to the discussion of climate change.

          You probably wouldn’t be so angry if you weren’t having to bend over backwards to make nonsensical arguments like this to defend your nonsensical opinions.

      • @Broodjefissa@lemmy.world
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        138 months ago

        Besides that i’d really like to know how much these sneseless wars contribute towards further polution. All the jets burning, ground vehicles moving, possibility of nukes

        • @LifeInMultipleChoice@lemmy.world
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          37 months ago

          Depends on how many lives are cut short and never become. If one woman were to have had 6 kids who then made another 12 grandchildren, their footprint would be much higher than if a woman never was going to have kids.

          Overall it is a dark topic. But ~7 lives to a fighter jet tank of gas if I saw correctly. (28 metric tons per tank) average footprint worldwide is about 4 per person.

          The moral of the story I suppose is to send everyone to war on foot, nude, and only hand to hand combat is permitted. Don’t want to figure out the footprint of a sword or hammer. Easier just to say pick up a rock.

          Now that that’s sorted, let’s have some tea.

    • DarkGamer
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      268 months ago

      Seriously, no matter which side she takes, she’s going to lose a lot of support.

  • @Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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    247 months ago

    Good job by Greta by addressing the elephant in the room first. Nobody is going to take the moral police seriously while the west is supporting genocide. Any climate change protest already comes off as massive virtue signaling right now.

    The entire point of preventing climate change is so humanity can continue to exist. The earth can exist without us. If we’re gonna start a third world War right now you can forget about the 2050 stuff.

  • @raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world
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    237 months ago

    The linked article even fails to mention what exactly was “pro Palestinian” in the address - there’s zero quotes. Shitty journalism.

    Also, you can be “pro Palestinian” without being “anti Israel” - although a lot of shit-for-brains populists try to deny that these days.

    • @Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      97 months ago

      I remember we used to have anti-war rallies.

      I don’t recall them being painted as pro-Iraqi.

      Can’t we just go back to that, rather than being asked to pick sides in an issue where 99% of us have no skin in the game?

      Why is is always Israel vs Palestine that gets trotted out for us? I don’t remember being asked to picked sides in the Second Congo War, and that killed 5 million people over five years.

      It’s just divisive bullshit.

  • /home/pineapplelover
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    157 months ago

    Both hamas and israel are commiting big no nos against each other. It’s very hard to even pick a side at this point because both have valid arguments and none are innocent.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    148 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Greta Thunberg was interrupted as she addressed a climate protest in Amsterdam on Sunday after inviting a Palestinian and an Afghan woman on stage.

    The Swedish activist was speaking to a crowd of tens of thousands in the Dutch capital before the country heads to the polls in a general election next week.

    Earlier proceedings had been interrupted as a small group of activists at the front of the crowd waved Palestinian flags and chanted pro-Palestinian slogans.

    The speeches on stage were the culmination of a mass protest that saw tens of thousands of people march through the streets of Amsterdam, urging for more action to tackle climate change.

    Political leaders including former European Union climate chief Frans Timmermans, who now leads a centre-left, two-party bloc in the election campaign, later addressed the crowd in a square behind the landmark Rijksmuseum.

    Event organiser, the Climate Crisis Coalition, said in a statement: "We live in a time of crises, all of which are the result of the political choices that have been made.


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      • @vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works
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        17 months ago

        No you’re thinking of daisy cutters, agent orange, and white phosphorus. Bombs can actually be quite good for the environment especially unexploded ordinance since it keeps people away. Though it can be bad for the local fauna.

          • @vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works
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            17 months ago

            Short of leveling a bunch of islands because the Japanese were doing a rather impressive impression of ticks I cant think of many examples of massive environmental impact caused by munitions. Maybe some the Germans and Soviets were chucking more artillery and explosives than I thought in eastern Europe but I can’t think of many other examples.

            Shouldve gone with asking about WW1 because fuck did that land get scourged. I was mostly making a joke about how a lot of areas that are closed off due to undetonated munitions double as nature preserves.

  • @dangblingus@lemmy.world
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    17 months ago

    It does seem, the world over, that wholesale displacement or extermination of Muslims is what a majority of people want. Why else is the Palestinian/Hamas line so regularly blurred by mainstream media the world over? Between Gaza, Xinjiang, North America, and Europe, there’s so much goddamn Islamophobia.