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Gen Z's hypocrisy on climate change has made Greta Thunberg look a fool

Gen Z's hypocrisy on climate change has made Greta Thunberg look a fool

Yahoo18-02-2025
At the UN Climate Action Summit of 2019, a 16-year-old Greta Thunberg gave the most famous speech of her young life. I'm sure we all remember. It was the one in which she indignantly squeaked 'How DARE you!' at older generations for ruining their grandchildren's future.
'You are failing us!' she hissed. 'But the young people are starting to understand your betrayal. The eyes of all future generations are upon you. And if you choose to fail us, I say: we will never forgive you!'
Chastening stuff. In hindsight, however, I can't help feeling that Greta's ire may have been somewhat misplaced. Because it turns out that the young are wrecking the planet, too. In fact, they may be doing even more to wreck it than their grandparents.
Just look at the results of a new poll by the Civil Aviation Authority. It found that those aged 18-34 fly a lot more frequently than those aged 55 and over. In the past year, almost three quarters of the former group travelled by plane, compared with only half of the latter group.
This may seem unexpected, given that members of Greta's generation are always telling pollsters – and everyone else who will listen – how terrified they are about climate change. But then, perhaps we shouldn't be so surprised. In 2023, a poll by YouGov found that young adults did less recycling than Baby Boomers. They were also less likely to save water, wash their clothes at low temperatures, and switch off electric lights when leaving a room.
For Greta, findings such as these must seem terribly embarrassing. Nowadays, admittedly, she appears to spend more of her time ranting about Israel than the climate. But, if she ever gets invited to another UN summit, perhaps she should apologise for her previous speech, thank the old for their efforts – and denounce her own generation, instead.
'You two-faced, selfish brats! See how stupid you've all made me look, with your virtue-signalling hypocrisy! How DARE you!'
This year was meant to see the opening of Britain's biggest theme park, just along the road from me in north Kent. The plan ended up being abandoned, however – after it was found that the land was home to a rare species of jumping spider. And protecting the spider was apparently deemed more important than boosting the local economy.
Personally I was somewhat taken aback by this news. For the life of me I couldn't see why anyone would be so keen to save the lives of spiders, especially ones that have the ability to jump at us. If anything, I'd have thought, the theme park represented an ideal opportunity to get rid of them. In fact, I would have expected the developers to make this a key plank of their proposal.
'Not only will our theme park create thousands of jobs for local people. It will also eliminate a load of hideous spiders. No more having to fetch an empty glass and a piece of card every time you find some horrible great creepy-crawly in your bathtub. Now it won't get into your house in the first place. Because we're going to drop a roller coaster on its head.'
Ultimately, though, the spiders prevailed. And now, it seems, they've won again. Because a plan to build 1,300 new houses and flats in the area has just been blocked – in order to protect the same rare species of jumping spider.
Naturally this will come as a blow to Sir Keir Starmer, since he'll find it harder to meet his target of 1.5million new homes by the next election. On the other hand, it's exciting news for people who live in the countryside – not only in north Kent, but everywhere else in Britain. Because now, to prevent their beautiful rural surroundings from being destroyed to make way for ugly new housing estates, villagers across the land will be ringing round the nation's pet shops, zoos and university ecology departments, eager to find out where they can get hold of some of these marvellous jumping spiders. Simply place a few in the local woods and fields, and hey presto. The developers are screwed.
Admittedly it might not be easy to meet demand, given that these jumping spiders are so rare. As a result, unscrupulous country-dwellers may be plotting to sneak down to north Kent and kidnap some. In which case, the people of north Kent will have to guard their prized jumping spiders day and night. Because the moment the spiders are gone, the entire area will be covered in houses and theme parks.
The potential for conflict doesn't end there, though. The row could lead to furious protests. Not from people, but from other species of spider.
Just wait. Any day now we'll see them marching on Whitehall in their millions, demanding that all arachnids be made equal before the law. After all, no one ever blocks a housing development to protect a daddy longlegs. Talk about two-tier justice.
Way of the World is a twice-weekly satirical look at the headlines aiming to mock the absurdities of the modern world. It is published at 7am every Tuesday and Saturday
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Family condemns Hamas video showing emaciated Israeli hostage
Family condemns Hamas video showing emaciated Israeli hostage

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Family condemns Hamas video showing emaciated Israeli hostage

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Hamas Releases Video of Israeli Hostage Evyatar David
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Hamas Releases Video of Israeli Hostage Evyatar David

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How UN delays, Hamas theft, and black market greed caused Gaza's hunger
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How UN delays, Hamas theft, and black market greed caused Gaza's hunger

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According to data on the website of the UN Office for Project Services (UNOPS), 2,013 trucks carrying 27,464.5 tons of aid — almost entirely food — entered Gaza since May 19. Of that number, 1,753 trucks carrying 23,353.3 tons of aid never reached their destinations. All 85% of the missing food was designated by the UNOPS as 'intercepted' by 'either peacefully by hungry people or forcefully armed actors, during transit in Gaza.' UNOPS is the operational arm of the UN that helps implement humanitarian, development, and peacebuilding projects. A record 90 trucks carrying 1,695 tons of aid were looted on May 31 alone, according to UNOPS. The data showed that 98.6% of the stolen aid was food, with the remainder designated as 'solid fuel,' nutrition,' and 'health.' In addition, 90.3% of the stolen aid belonged to the World Food Program. The remaining aid belonged to World Central Kitchen, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF), the International Committee for the Red Cross, and the International Medical Corps in Gaza. UNOPS did not refer to Hamas by name, but Israelis and Palestinians did. 'From the start, Hamas has tried to make the humanitarian distribution by GHF fail,' an Israeli military official told TPS-IL. 'They intimidate civilians and threaten anyone who approaches aid centers.' The same official confirmed a June incident in which grenades were thrown at American aid workers. Gaza activist Hamza al-Masri, who runs a popular Telegram channel, wrote, 'Every Gazan knows who holds weapons. If someone has weapons, either they are Hamas or they bought them from Hamas. There are no secrets here.' In a comment under the post, a user named Samer Bashir, asked whether the attackers were Hamas. Al-Masri responded: 'All the thugs and thieves are Hamas and work for Hamas.' Videos circulated on July 29th show aid trucks passing through Deir al-Balah while armed men fired into the air to disperse civilians. Eyewitnesses claim the gunmen are affiliated with Hamas. Similar accounts point to the terror group's systematic interference with humanitarian operations. The accusations are further is supported by internal Hamas documents seized by Israel, intercepted communications, and verified images. During the initial stage of the war in October 2023, Hamas diverted 25% of all incoming UN aid. By early 2024, this quota was redistributed as follows: 7% to Hamas' Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Brigades, 4% to Hamas's civil administration, 4% to the group's political leadership. Intercepted documents also reveal the threats against aid workers and deliberate efforts to sow chaos in Gaza's streets, such as closing markets, stirring unrest, and preventing civilians from reaching distribution points through intimidation or gunfire. Discussing the army's roles, aid distribution sites, convoys, and air drops, Israel Defense Forces spokesperson Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin told reporters on July 27, 'Hamas, on the other hand, is actively obstructing the process — stealing aid, storing it in tunnels, and using disinformation to spread the false claim of famine in Gaza.' Tactics used by Hamas include physically seizing UN trucks, blocking civilian access to aid sites, impersonating aid workers, and inserting operatives into UN convoys. A parallel distribution network has reportedly been established — selling confiscated aid at prices 300–500% above market value, taxing local vendors, and using food control as a political tool. The situation has reached the point where some humanitarian organizations are reluctant to collect or distribute aid due fear of violence or being seen as cooperating with Israel. 'Hamas's goal is to get rid of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation distributing food in Gaza,' said Gilboa. 'They want to be the only ones ensuring Gazans' survival and have been very successful in mounting a campaign portraying hunger everywhere.' Black market profiteering off donated food Despite the surge in aid deliveries, Palestinians in Gaza City's Al Sahaba market told TPS-IL the prices are too expensive. 'Today I saw fruit for the first time in four months. Mangoes, bananas… but they're selling them for 200 shekels [$59]. People can't afford it. We see it, smell it, and walk away,' one Palestinian told TPS-IL on July 28, one day after the airdrops and new aid protocols began. 'It's an injustice and it's a sin.' Another woman told TPS-IL how her children ask for fruit they hadn't tasted in months. 'I can't buy four pieces even for my kids. It's like a dream on display,' she said. A third Palestinian told TPS-IL, 'The flour — when it enters Gaza, they steal it. And now they're going to raise the price from 30 to 60 shekels [$8.80 to &17.70]. It's unbelievable.' Footage from the market confirmed the disparity: shelves stocked with aid-labeled goods resold at prices unaffordable to the intended civilians. Official Israeli sources explained to TPS-IL that all trucks currently entering Gaza carry humanitarian aid provided by the UN, international NGOs, or donor states — and that Gaza's private sector is not currently authorized to import goods. The absence of commercial shipments for Gaza merchants raises questions about how donated flour, fruits, vegetables, water, canned goods, and more end up in markets with inflated prices. Palestinian sources inside Gaza told TPS-IL that much of the food in the markets originated from international aid for months — including American shipments — but is resold at inflated prices, sometimes 300%. Basic staples like flour and rice, originally meant for free distribution, are reportedly diverted to private vendors. 'They distribute the aid to traders instead of families,' one Gaza resident told TPS-IL. Dr. Eyal Ofer, an expert on Gaza's economy, explained to TPS-IL that 'market prices are the core problem fueling Gaza hunger.' He blamed 'endless cash being funneled in' by the UN and Palestinian Authority, enabling looting and price inflation. 'Hamas is taking 45% of every UN cash transfer without even touching the aid,' he said. 'The people who get the money can afford the inflated prices; those who don't, starve.' He added, 'I've been proposing for a long time is to stop the cash flow. You don't eat cash.' Approximately 1,200 people were killed, and 252 Israelis and foreigners were taken hostage in Hamas's attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on October 7. Of the 50 remaining hostages, around 30 are believed to be dead. Solve the daily Crossword

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