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The Greta Thunberg enigma: A digital Joan of Arc or useful mascot?

The Greta Thunberg enigma: A digital Joan of Arc or useful mascot?

Has young Swedish activist become a figurehead and cheerleader, always available for the adrenaline high of global agitprop?
We all remember that rather shy teenager who abandoned her classroom in Stockholm to protest for climate change awareness in 2018. Greta Thunberg, at 15, seemed the wisest person on the planet, and it would have taken a heartless crone not to be moved or impressed.
She later protested at the Swedish parliament, carrying a School Strike for Climate sign and handing out flyers. She vowed to continue her protests until her homeland was in compliance with the Paris Agreement, signed by the great, the good and blatantly insincere in 2015.

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Paul Hosford: Accusing Thunberg of Instagram activism over Gaza is missing the point
Paul Hosford: Accusing Thunberg of Instagram activism over Gaza is missing the point

Irish Examiner

timean hour ago

  • Irish Examiner

Paul Hosford: Accusing Thunberg of Instagram activism over Gaza is missing the point

Earlier this week, I had a feeling of dread that I would wake up to news of the death of Greta Thunberg, a feeling others have echoed. When I went to sleep on Sunday night, the British-flagged yacht Madleen was sailing headlong towards Gaza carrying just a drop of the flood of aid required to ease the humanitarian disaster in the enclave. Twelve people on a yacht carrying baby formula, food, and medical supplies, including the 22-year-old climate activist, and there was legitimate concern that the Israeli administration would show no restraint — as it did in May 2010 when nine floatilla passengers were killed during a raid on a group of ships aiming to bring aid to Gaza. In the end, Israeli forces boarded the yacht and made a show of how humane the whole thing was, perhaps aware that killing innocents would be treated differently if their number included a French MEP. The captured dozen was given sandwiches and forced to turn over their phones as the yacht was escorted to Ashdod port. From there, the Israeli government began its mocking of the group. It published a picture of Ms Thunberg on social media and, before initiating deportation proceedings, was slamming the operation as a PR stunt — calling it a 'selfie ship' full of 'celebrities'. 'This wasn't humanitarian aid. It's Instagram activism,' said Israeli government spokesperson David Mencer, who extolled the virtues of his government, saying that it had delivered over 1,200 truckloads of aid in the last two weeks. This is despite the latest assessment from the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) which says that people in Gaza are starving and that this demands the urgent opening of all crossings and on impeded access for humanitarian organisations to deliver aid at scale, through multiple routes. There is no question that aid to Gaza is being choked off by the Israeli government and that what is getting through is just a drop in an ocean growing every single day. Ongoing incidents Meanwhile, hospitals in Gaza City said 25 people were killed overnight on Wednesday into Thursday, near a convoy transporting flour and at a food distribution site run by the US and Israeli-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), which has been criticised as the wrong vehicle to deliver aid. Staff of the GHF died in an ambush on Thursday after a bus transporting them was raked with gunfire, an attack the Israeli government has blamed on Hamas. While the Israeli government mocked those who put their hands up and volunteered for the aid mission, it was joined online by an unlikely ally — the 'reasonable' adult. In any news story or Instagram post, or whatever tweets are called these days, you will have found a cohort of people delighting in the failure of the Madleen to deliver baby formula to starving children. These people will call themselves reasonable, they will call themselves centrists, they will call themselves good, and at the same time they will delight in the failure of a small amount of medical supplies reaching what has been described as hell on earth because they don't like the 22-year-old autistic woman from the internet. They are Christians with the best intentions, calling for a stranger's head. Ms Thunberg has long attracted this kind of commentary, particularly angering men with her activism and general refusal to just be quiet. They will have the same reaction to Paul Murphy's arrest as part of a march to the Rafah Crossing. The rationale appears to be that they genuinely believe that this was a personal mission from the Swedish woman — little more than an image-raising exercise. To what end someone who has spent most of her life engaged in the kind of full-throated activism that comes at more personal cost than benefit would do this is never really explained, but these commenters are sure that she is some kind of 'silly little girl' or some variation thereof. It couldn't be that Ms Thunberg was simply doing what she believed was right and using her immense global platform to highlight the continued suffering of Gazans; there must be an ulterior motive, one for personal benefit. Protesters took part in a demonstration outside the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office in Whitehall, London, calling for the UK government to protect the crew of Madleen, which carried Ms Thunberg and other activists. Picture: James Manning/PA Those comments betray much about those who make them, those who throw 'virtue signalling' or 'do-gooder' as slurs. They cannot imagine virtue, or good or empathy, that is genuinely selfless because they lack the capacity for all three. They cannot, at the same time, understand why the residents of Los Angeles would take to the streets as their friends and neighbours are extrajudicially arrested. They cheer online as rubber bullets, which killed 14 people during The Troubles, are fired indiscriminately into crowds or with terrifying accuracy at members of the media, or women walking home, because they do not see those people as on their side. These are the same people who will say they are afraid of Dublin's O'Connell St in the daytime, mocking those who stand up to oppression or genocide. PR exercise Of course the Madleen was a PR exercise. Of course it was a publicity stunt. Nobody on board expected the aid they were carrying to fix everything. In fact, I'm sure the whole exercise finished the way most on board would have imagined. They are not ignorant to the reality of what Israel will and will not allow reach Gaza. However, great injustices require action, and if that means making social media users look at a group of people on a quixotic boat journey, then so be it. This is not about your personal feelings towards the messenger and, if your first reaction was to look at method rather than message, then that is on you. In Gaza over the last few days, the internet has collapsed, the OCHA said on Thursday, due to damage to the last fibre cable route serving central and southern Gaza — likely caused during heavy military activity. They warn that this is not a routine outage, but a total failure of Gaza's digital infrastructure. Lifelines to emergency services, humanitarian coordination, and critical information for civilians have all been cut. There is a full Internet blackout, and mobile networks are barely functioning. So if any Gazans had had worries about the online discourse surrounding attempts to bring them aid — in between trying to stay alive, of course — they would not have had the capacity by week's end to check in on the comments section. The reaction to a group of people — including a very high-profile young woman, yes — trying to do the right thing speaks volumes for where social media has driven us: To a place where a sentence can contain the words 'I'm not happy that aid was blocked from reaching Gaza' and be followed by a 'but'. Perhaps not every thought needs to be shared, not every issue opined upon. Maybe, just maybe, it is time to read and listen and understand more than we post, and talk and think. It is a time to act and support the bravery of those who act in ways we cannot ourselves. Anything else will lead to what folk singer Tyler Childers calls 'the start of a long, violent history, of tucking our tails as we try to abide'. Read More Three Irish people detained in Cairo ahead of protest walk to Gaza border

The Greta Thunberg enigma: A digital Joan of Arc or useful mascot?
The Greta Thunberg enigma: A digital Joan of Arc or useful mascot?

Irish Independent

timea day ago

  • Irish Independent

The Greta Thunberg enigma: A digital Joan of Arc or useful mascot?

Has young Swedish activist become a figurehead and cheerleader, always available for the adrenaline high of global agitprop? We all remember that rather shy teenager who abandoned her classroom in Stockholm to protest for climate change awareness in 2018. Greta Thunberg, at 15, seemed the wisest person on the planet, and it would have taken a heartless crone not to be moved or impressed. She later protested at the Swedish parliament, carrying a School Strike for Climate sign and handing out flyers. She vowed to continue her protests until her homeland was in compliance with the Paris Agreement, signed by the great, the good and blatantly insincere in 2015.

EU lawmakers propose further easing of corporate sustainability rules amid backlash
EU lawmakers propose further easing of corporate sustainability rules amid backlash

Irish Examiner

timea day ago

  • Irish Examiner

EU lawmakers propose further easing of corporate sustainability rules amid backlash

The European Union should further slash the number of companies subject to its environmental and corporate sustainability rules, the European Parliament member leading negotiations on the policies said on Thursday. The European Commission proposed a "simplification omnibus" in February that it said would help European firms compete with foreign rivals by cutting back on sustainability reporting rules and obligations intended to root out abuses in their supply chains. Those proposals did not go far enough, according to Swedish centre-right lawmaker Jörgen Warborn, who has drafted amendments to scale back the laws further to only cover companies with 3,000 employees or more and over €450m in turnover. The commission proposal would exempt companies with fewer than 1,000 employees - already cutting out more than 80% of the roughly 50,000 companies currently covered by the green reporting rules. The EU counts around 6,000 companies with more than 1,000 employees. "Europe is falling behind the US and China in the global race for competitiveness. I'm entering this process with a clear ambition: to cut costs for businesses and go further than the commission on simplification," Warborn said in a statement on Thursday. His draft proposal must be negotiated in the European Parliament where other lawmakers can propose their own amendments. The Parliament will agree the final changes with EU member countries in the coming months. Warborn, a member of the centre-right European People's Party lawmaker group, is facing competing calls from some right-wing lawmakers to scrap the policies entirely, and Socialist and Green lawmakers vowing to preserve them. French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz have both demanded the EU scrap the supply chain law. But the walk-back on ESG rules has met resistance from some investors and campaigners, who have warned it weakens corporate accountability and hurts the bloc's ability to attract more investments towards meeting climate goals. Warborn said his proposed changes will not weaken Europe's sustainability standards, but rather free up resources that companies can instead invest in innovation. Reuters

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