
Left-wing activists like Greta Thunberg care more about fame than facts
This image will forever be compared with the horror show of the actual kidnap of hostages by Hamas and other Palestinian militant groups. There are girls younger than Greta, with bloodied pants, their Achilles tendons cut; a mother clutching her two red-haired children whom we now know are dead; a terrified old lady being abducted. It is said that the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) will force Thunberg and her crew to watch the brutal footage recorded on October 7. I doubt this will make much difference. In 2023, the IDF showed Hamas body cam footage collected after the Nova festival attack to the press in London. Most of the viewers were in tears but certain activist 'journalists' came out saying there was no proof of women being raped as they had not been shown that.
Thunberg, like so many of her generation wrapped up in their made-in-China keffiyehs, are not interested in the specifics of this conflict.
This is what happens when a young girl with a penchant for protest becomes too feted. She addressed national parliaments and Davos as a climate activist and was interviewed everywhere, so she must have grasped the fact that her youth and passion energised many. Unsurprisingly, then, her symbolic power was soon commodified as she appeared at protest after protest, morphing effortlessly from climate change activism to Palestinian solidarity.
Political activism is now algorithmic. Hey, if you liked that cause, then try this one.
The 'Left' these days often seems little more than a collection of disparate causes: eco stuff, trans rights and Free Palestine. The contradictions between these beliefs are underplayed as they become bundled together as an omnicause. I first heard that word used in 2023. The omnicause can incorporate everything from animal rights to emptying the jails. Forget the single issues that require specific, often boring campaigning: the omnicause is a moronic vacuum where analysis goes to die.
It is a product partly of the horizontalisation of social media. By this, I mean that something such as Black Lives Matter and Defund the Police, which had relevance in America a few years ago, gets picked up here… even though we have a quite different population and methods of policing.
Those protesting what is happening in Gaza are not all uninformed, but many are.
Younger people recruited from Just Stop Oil (and now presenting as Youth Demand) have stopped soup-throwing in favour of this new pressing cause. But they have not talked about famine in Yemen or the atrocities of Sudan. Interconnectedness has its limits, after all.
There may well be links between climate change and war. Many argue that drought was a factor in the unrest that led to the Syrian civil war.
The omnicause, though, does not do specifics. It favours symbolic demonstrations that can go viral. These simplistic spectacles of righteousness often backfire.
What did Fossil Free Books achieve, for instance? It decided to campaign against companies that had any connection to Israel. The result was that investment firms such as Baillie Gifford stopped funding book festivals. How this helped either the environment or indeed the Palestinian cause is something of a mystery.
Thunberg's stunt has been similarly self-aggrandising and vacuous. Watching footage of this climate activist and her mates all chucking their expensive phones into the sea as they were about to be taken by the Israelis showed that, of course, when the chips were down, environmental concerns went out of the window. The omnicause does not require logic, consistency or even coherence. It is closer to acting than activism. It depends on melodrama and a narrative of provocative images.
Thunberg may be brave and have been prepared to sacrifice herself – though for what, exactly, I am not sure. But now we have seen the pictures, I am afraid that what she has sacrificed has been her integrity.
The omnicause burns itself out in the end because it has no actual strategy. It simply signifies tribal loyalty. It gobbles everything up and spits out its participants, who simply move on to the next 'wrong' thing.
You might think that, for Thunberg, her ship has sailed. But that does not mean she won't clamber aboard the next one that hoves into view.
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The Independent
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The Independent
37 minutes ago
- The Independent
Greta Thunberg Gaza flotilla reaches port after being seized by Israel
The boat carrying Greta Thunberg and other activists seeking to bring symbolic aid to Gaza has arrived at an Israeli port, after Israel intercepted the flotilla. Adalah, a legal rights group representing the activists, said at 10pm local time they had received confirmation that the group were being held at Ashdod port and were undergoing processing before being handed over to Israeli immigration authorities. Demanding access to the passengers of the British-flagged yacht Madleen – which had sought to break the naval blockade on Gaza – Adalah said: 'Unless they agree to leave immediately, they will be transferred to the detention facility in Ramleh. 'While authorities have indicated that those who consent to deportation may be allowed to fly out from Tel Aviv tonight, it's unclear what conditions – such as signing documents or waiving rights – may be imposed.' Earlier, organisers of the Freedom Flotilla, said there had there been no contact with the 12 international activists for nearly 19 hours after the ship was intercepted by Israeli forces in international waters at around 2am on Monday. Warning that the activists had been 'forcibly abducted' while sailing peacefully under international law, organiser Huwaida Arraf told Al Jazeera that Israel 'has no authority' to maintain its blockade on Gaza – and criticised the UK government for failing to issue a strong condemnation of the UK-flagged vessel's seizure. Downing Street on Monday afternoon urged Israel to act 'safely with restraint, in line with international humanitarian law', and described the humanitarian situation in Gaza as 'appalling and intolerable'. A humanitarian catastrophe is unfolding in the Strip, where more than 54,000 Palestinians have been killed in the Israeli military campaign launched after Hamas 's attacks on 7 October 2023 killed more than 1,200 people in Israel, with 250 others taken hostage. The flotilla, which is the latest in a long line of activist attempts to break the blockade of Gaza, sought to raise international awareness of the crisis in Gaza and deliver a small amount of aid, including rice and baby formula. During one previous flotilla in May 2010, nine people were killed after Israeli commandos opened fire on activists after boarding the flagship vessel 90 miles from Gaza. Just last month, two drones hit another vessel destined for Gaza while it was off the coast of Malta. In a video filmed before the Madleen was captured, released by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, 22-year-old activist Thunberg said: 'If you see this video, we have been intercepted and kidnapped in international waters by Israeli occupational forces or forces that support Israel. 'I urge all my friends, family and comrades to put pressure on the Swedish government to release me and the others as soon as possible.' However, speaking outside the Swedish parliament on Monday, foreign minister Maria Malmer Stenergard said she did not believe Ms Thunberg was in need of support from Stockholm, adding: 'A great responsibility rests on those who choose to travel contrary to the advice.' Speaking as protestors gathered in Stockholm to demand action, Ms Stenergard condemned a 'dangerous' campaign to flood her ministry with calls, adding: 'The consequence is that Swedes in need abroad have to wait in line for far too long.' But the Swedish foreign ministry said it was in contact with Israeli authorities, telling Reuters: 'Should the need for consular support arise, the Embassy and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs will assess how we can best help the Swedish citizen/Greta Thunberg resolve her situation.' With Israel's defence minister Israel Katz claiming he had instructed the military to show 'antisemitic Greta and her Hamas-supporting friends' footage of the 7 October attacks upon their arrival in Ashdod, Israel's foreign ministry also sought to dismiss the flotilla as a stunt. The ministry said on social media: 'The 'Selfie Yacht' docked at Ashdod Port a short while ago. The passengers are currently undergoing medical examinations to ensure they are in good health.' 'The tiny amount of aid that was on the yacht and not consumed by the 'celebrities' will be transferred to Gaza through real humanitarian channels,' the ministry said, days after Israel's controversial new 'aid plan' descended into chaos, with reports of stampedes and guns being fired at starving crowds. In a fresh warning on Monday, the United Nations said families in Gaza are 'hanging on by a thread' with the aid reaching the Strip remaining 'critically insufficient'. As well as tightly controlling air and land deliveries into Gaza – permitting no supplies to enter for three months earlier this year – Israel has imposed a naval blockade on the Strip since Hamas took control in 2007, saying it aims to stop weapons from reaching the militant group. The UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, Francesca Albanese – who has supported the Freedom Flotilla operation – urged other boats to challenge the Gaza blockade. ' Madleen 's journey may have ended, but the mission isn't over. Every Mediterranean port must send boats with aid [and] solidarity to Gaza,' she said.


Telegraph
44 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Trump: Israel has enough problems without kidnapping Greta Thunberg
Israel has 'enough problems without kidnapping Greta Thunberg', Donald Trump said after the aid flotilla she was travelling to Gaza on was seized. The US president described the Swedish activist as an 'angry young person' after her attempt to break the Gaza blockade was thwarted by the Israeli navy. 'She's a strange person. She's a young, angry person. I don't know if it's real anger. It's hard to believe, actually, but I saw what happened,' he said. 'She's certainly different... anger management, I think she has to go to an anger management class.' Israeli naval forces boarded and seized a charity vessel carrying Thunberg on Monday. The British-flagged yacht, Madleen, which is operated by the pro-Palestinian Freedom Flotilla Coalition, had aimed to deliver a symbolic amount of aid to Gaza and raise international awareness of the humanitarian crisis there. 'If you see this video, we have been intercepted and kidnapped in international waters by Israeli occupational forces or forces that support Israel,' Ms Thunberg, 22, said in a video released by the FCC, filmed before the vessel was captured. 'I urge all my friends, family and comrades to put pressure on the Swedish government to release me and the others as soon as possible.' Mr Trump dismissed Ms Thunberg's assertion that she had been kidnapped, saying: 'I think Israel has enough problems without kidnapping Greta Thunberg.' This was not the first time Ms Thunberg and the US president have crossed swords. Five years ago, Ms Thunberg displayed her contempt for Mr Trump when, aged only 16, she gave the US president a 'death stare' as he arrived at the United Nations. Ms Thunberg's withering glare, which came ahead of her addressing the UN on climate change, went viral. In February, JD Vance, the US vice-president, took a dig at Ms Thunberg when addressing the Munich Security Conference as he defended the role of Elon Musk in the Trump administration. 'Trust me, I say this with all humour, if American democracy can survive 10 years of Greta Thunberg's scolding, you guys can survive a few months of Elon Musk.'