• @khepri
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    1013 months ago

    I wonder if they understand what they’re encouraging by making the punishment for protests harsher than the punishments for direct action…not that that’s any of my business…

  • @[email protected]
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    823 months ago

    Huh, up to 10 years for disruptive protest? Looks like it’s only 8 years for a planned arson as long as you don’t hurt anyone.

    • ms.lane
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      273 months ago

      In minecraft, that might send the wrong message.

    • @MisterFrog
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      43 months ago

      So, if you plan an arson as a protest, is that 8 years or 18 years?

        • @[email protected]
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          23 months ago

          As long as you don’t slowly walk or away from the burning building, you should be fine. IANAL

      • @[email protected]
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        13 months ago

        It’s not a protest, I just felt like burning down some Big Oil headquarters! Those are two totally different things, I promise!

  • @WhatAmLemmy
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    3 months ago

    This is just one of countless examples that we live in capitalist plutocracies — ruled by corporations and the richest family dynasties who make up their majority shareholders — masquerading as “democracies”. Sure, you can vote, but your only options are pre-approved.

    When the people causing genocide, war, and ecocide are untouchable, their entire rule of law is invalid.

    • Alex
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      43 months ago

      FPTP-voting was designed by wealthy romans for the benefit of wealthy romans millenia ago and that people accept this type of democracy today is just bonkers to me.

  • @Burn_The_Right
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    563 months ago

    Humanity is in mortal danger because of conservatism. If you aren’t fighting conservatism, you aren’t fighting climate change.

    • @WaxedWookie
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      93 months ago

      To be fair, liberalism, while far better isn’t remotely close to being an adequate solution, but we all need to kick the can down the road by picking whatever least bad option is available to us.

      • @Aceticon
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        3 months ago

        Well, that’s the funny bit: the government in the UK aren’t the Conservatives, they’re New Labour who are Neoliberals, by the standards of the rest of Europe they’re even Hard Neoliberals.

        Nowadays the difference between Conservatives and Liberals is really just the subset of Morality that’s used in Identity Politics. They’re certainly not different on Economics, not on Quality Of Life for the many, not on a good Future for our Children (which provides a Selfishness-driven reason be an Environmentalist, which is better than nothing) and certainly not on Environmentalism as a Moral posture.

        We get some loud confrontational bullshit from both around various “-isms” all the while they’re both doing what’s best for the most wealthy of society and screw the rest (both present and future) and definitely screw anybody or anything that has no money and no capability for action, such as Nature.

        You see that exact same shit in the US, by they way, as well as (in not quite as extreme form) in most of Europe.

    • @[email protected]
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      63 months ago

      Neolibs sell us out to big oil just as much as neocons do. The root problem is capitalism. You cannot fight against climate change without fighting against capitalism

      • @Burn_The_Right
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        53 months ago

        Neoliberals are conservatives. Sadly, we do not have a progressive party in the U.S., so we must choose one of the conservative parties.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    Totally approrpiate, since they’re terrorists endangering the well-being of everyone and the planet. Wait…

  • @Aceticon
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    273 months ago

    Meanwhile the UK still keeps on sending weapon shipments to an actively Genocidal Israel (they recently stopped but 20 out of 300 kinds of such exports).

    It didn’t took long to disprove the hopes of anybody who thought New Labour would be anything but a slightly less hard Right than the Tories.

    • Skeezix
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      -23 months ago

      There could be a feel good story about a kitten being saved from a well and you’d somehow tie it in to gaza.

      • @Aceticon
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        3 months ago

        Nice, an Appeal To Absurd Falacy in the wild.

        Hadn’t see one of those in a day or two.

        It says a lot that you went for making fantastical claims about the messenger rather than for disproving the message.

        • Skeezix
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          The message is an important one to attend to. But not every post on Lemmy requires a reminder that gaza is a genocide or that people are enabling it.

          • @Aceticon
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            3 months ago

            Having lived in the UK and even participated in a politics there (as a member of the Greenparty, FYI) it seems to me that both the English’s power elites’ support of an ethno-Fascist regime abroad even while it activelly commits Genocide (reminiscent of Thatcher’s support of Apartheid South Africa and of Pinochet in Chile) and their authoritarian solutions to Environmentalism as a “problem” of people demonstrating rather than the Environment being destroyed, are all part of a broader pattern of Rightwing Authroritarianism were also fit things like the extreme Civil Society Surveillance denounced by Snowden (which, curiously, whilst in the US some was deemed unconstitutionally and walked back, in the UK laws were passed to make it all retroactively legal and the Press was shut up using D-Notices) and other general trends in the exercise of power in the country (remember how the Tories passed a law that de facto created minimum £1000 penalties in all criminal cases).

            This is not even new - Environmentalist organisations were infiltrated by undercover police back in the 80s/90s who even left some women there carrying their children and things like kettling were used against demonstrators back in the big anti-Finance and anti-Austerity demonstrations in London after the 2008 Crash were even an unarmed and non-violent person got killed by a police officer (a case were the officer in question ultimatelly got out with no meaningful penalty).

            Brexit wasn’t born in a vacuum and compared with the rest of Europe the UK has been further Right and more Authoritarian, copying the worst bits of the American system rather than the best and mixing them with a heavily and well entrenched classism and the idea that people should know their place, with no tradition of rule by consensus and an electoral system - First Past The Post - that generally results in Winner Takes All outcomes were a mere 35% of votes is enough for absolute majorities which are pretty much all powerful since Britain foesn’t have a written Constitution.

            Having lived in a few countries in Europe, I came out of over a decade in the UK with the idea that it was the country in Europe most likely to turn Fascist. A posh style of Fascism but Fascism none the less.

            Sadly New Labour, who ideologically are something else altogether than (old) Labour, seem just as prone to Authoritarianism as the Tories, which actually makes sense given that it was during New Labour’s last period in Government that the most extreme civil society surveillance apparatus in the West was built in Britain.

            TL;DR in summary, Britain even under New Labour is very rightwing and riddled with authoritarianism and their unwavering support (once again) for violent Fascism abroad fits the pattern and is a nice reminder of how its power elites think.

  • @Wappen
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    263 months ago

    Bruh, I misread the title at first and thought Big Oil was sentenced but the reality is just sad and angering.

  • @scarabic
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    3 months ago

    The police and army do not protect the lives and freedom of individuals and they never have. They exist to create the conditions for business to do business. The law barely cares if you rape and murder some poor, powerless individual. But cause a big business some serious property damage? Oh no we can’t have that. Time to make an example of you.

  • @dubious
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    113 months ago

    when society turns on the people with a conscience, the people with a conscience should turn on society. stop playing nice.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      03 months ago

      stop playing nice.

      What’s your next move, hot shot?

      • @dubious
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        13 months ago

        not being trolled by lemmy d list celebrities, and then, i don’t know, maybe i’ll smoke a joint.

  • @[email protected]
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    93 months ago

    I would be more likely to sympathize with JSO if they engaged in direct action against the oil industry instead of the general public. Stopping ambulances and electric cars in traffic does not get the world to abandon oil.

    If you’re going to commit a criminal offense regardless, at least target something that actively supports or benefits from the oil industry. They could go full Robin Hood, robbing businesses that support the oil industry and anonymously donating the proceeds to environmental causes. They could threaten car dealerships that sell ICE vehicles. While it is certainly illegal to burn down a gas station, at least that would be an attack on the object of their protests rather than the general public.

    Nothing wrong with their stated cause, but their actions don’t support that cause.

      • @[email protected]
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        -53 months ago

        They would raise more awareness and facilitate more productive discussion and alienate fewer people and have a tangible, measurable effect by taking direct action against car dealership and gas stations.

        The kind of “discussion” they have most “facilitated” is how to increase the penalties for impeding traffic. Their only “success” has been winning enough support for legislators to increase penalties and enforcement for “impeding traffic”

        • @mojofrododojo
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          43 months ago

          then why not embody the change you’d like to see. if it’s truly a better way, go nuts bro.

          because from here it just looks like “why don’t they quit protesting and start blowing up oil facilities lol”

          • @[email protected]
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            -83 months ago

            When black people fought for civil rights, they went where their civil rights were being infringed upon, they exercised their rights anyway, and showed the world the infringement. They didn’t go into black communities and hassle black people just going about their days to “bring awareness” to the problem of civil rights infringement. Because that would be stupid. You don’t harass the victims of infringement. You go after the perpetrators.

            Now, the oil industry is victimizing the general public, and JSO… Is also victimizing the general public.

            Fuck. That. Shit.

            Target the oil industry, and get the fuck out of the street.

            • @mojofrododojo
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              83 months ago

              Nope. Targeting the industry alone isn’t going to change people’s way of thinking. Consumers who face no consequences for using a fuel that’s rapidly warming and destroying the ecosystem need waking up too.

              Sounds like this upsets you, boo fuckin’ hoo.

              And keep the black struggle for civil rights out of your fucking mouth, their work deserves better than you using them to shill for oil comfort.

              • @[email protected]
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                03 months ago

                Switching to an electric car doesn’t get them out of a JSO-sponsored traffic jam. Nothing about the JSO actions provides any incentive for the consumer to actually do anything about oil.

                You take out the gas stations, you’ll actually be inconveniencing the consumers who still use them. And only those consumers. Everyone else is untouched. You’re also promoting the remaining shops that don’t offer fossil fuels, by removing their competition. You won’t be interfering with the ambulances and electric cars either.

                Consumers will get the hint that oil is under indictment, and factor that into their next car buying decision. That doesn’t happen when an electric car doesn’t get them past a JSO traffic jam.

                • Deme
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                  3 months ago

                  You approach the whole issue as if it were just up to consumers to stop oil by changing their habits. It isn’t. Switching to an EV isn’t a solution when you’re still paying taxes that go into subsidizing fossil fuels. (Switching to an EV for getting around in a city isn’t a solution anyways, use public transit or get a bicycle). Consumers won’t stop consuming oil until the full cost (including all externalities) of it is shown in the price tag. Action is needed at the political level, and that won’t happen unless enough noise is made regarding the issue. That’s what JSO is doing.

                • @[email protected]
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                  23 months ago

                  The electric cars are powered by gas and coal in the uk. We are a long way from pure renewable electricity and between mining and shipping metals, steel, and tyres they’re not quite the perfect green vehicles they’re presented as.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      I can’t imagine their prison sentences if they were actually thieves. Look at what they’re getting for doing peaceful protests. People freak out when property is disturbed.

      • @[email protected]
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        33 months ago

        People freak out when travel is disturbed. They freak out quite a bit less when a big corporation that everyone hates happens to get targeted by environmental activists.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          . . . that everyone hates so hard they give them loads of money.

          I wish they all hated me like that.

    • @mojofrododojo
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      93 months ago

      “do something, anything as long as it doesn’t affect me”

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        "do something, anything as long as it doesn’t affect me actually targets the oil industry.

        FTFY.

        • Deme
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          3 months ago

          Disruptions cause outrage

          Outrage sparks discusson

          Discussion leads to political pressure

          Political pressure leads to action that targets the oil industry

          • @[email protected]
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            3 months ago

            So close, yet so far away…

            Political pressure leads to action that targets the oil industry the protesters.

            FTFY.

            The only thing they have actually achieved is enhanced enforcement and penalties for impeding traffic.

            • @[email protected]
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              13 months ago

              In the Netherlands, since 2023, there have been quite a lot of road blockades by XR (with hundreds to thousands of demonstrators) with no such penalties at all. From what I’ve read the activists in the UK were (rightfully so) determined to have their say in the court room while the judge sounded like a climate crisis denial person and got impatient. If I were a lawyer I would have made an attempt to get this judge dismissed on the case for not being objective and before they were ready for their verdict.

            • Deme
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              -13 months ago

              The process I described unfortunately does take longer than the initial lashing outs of the establisment. A couple of “martyrs” may not be the worst thing either.

              YungOnions already provided you with some good articles about why and how nonviolent disruption works. I suggest you read them.

              • @[email protected]
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                03 months ago

                JSO “martyrs” are for the cause of free speech, not against oil. JSO is distracting people from oil. JSO is diverting legislative attention away from oil.

                I suggest you stop reading articles, and start looking at reality. The reality is that JSO has demonstrated they are as effective at “disrupting” the oil industry as the Westboro Baptist Church has been at “disrupting” homosexuality: not the fuck at all.

                • Deme
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                  I’m not sure how you managed to misunderstand, but by disruptions I was referring to precisely the kind of disruptions of the lives of ordinary people that - and I’m sure we can at least agree on this - they have quite successfully caused.

                  Our two parallel discussions are about the methods of protesting against the use of fossil fuels. Our discussions here exists because of JSO. It got you thinking about what should be done to get rid of the use of fossil fuels, even if this was just for the purposes of making counterarguments.

    • @WaxedWookie
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      83 months ago

      There have been direct actions recently - they get subjected to media blackout. If you want to shift public sentiment, you need eyeballs - they get eyeballs, and while responses are obviously mixed, they lean positive over time.

    • @sandbox
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      73 months ago

      Personally, I believe that criticising the efforts of activists with whom you share a cause is one of the lowest things you can do.

      If I think there’s a better way, then I go do it, or at the very least I would participate in that group and try to bring them around to my way of thinking.

      I definitely would not publicly criticise them because that doesn’t actually help the cause, it just damages it.

      But of course, I can’t hold people to the same high expectations I hold of myself.

      • @[email protected]
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        -73 months ago

        Their actions are damaging the cause. They are making it harder for environmental activism to be taken seriously. Now, actual activism has to fight not just the oil industry, but also everyone that JSO has pissed off.

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      They literally DID. The fact you don’t know about it shows why they also do their publicity stunts.

  • @Hamartia
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    53 months ago

    Kinda relevant: from the latest Private Eye. Just a little insight to the background of the people pushing for this outcome.

    The Heritage Foundation who would have guessed it would be in the mix.

  • @[email protected]
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    53 months ago

    Oh those damn Conservatives, such things would never happen under the rule of the Labour Party.

    Right?

    • @eskimofry
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      23 months ago

      Hey good thing is people are not as numb to the class warfare nowadays as before so your coy attempt to make this partisan isn’t as effective.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 months ago

        Ah, yes. Thank you for reiterating my point by using instead of sarcasm the always very funny false accusation method.

        • @eskimofry
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          23 months ago

          At least my iteration can’t be mistaken unlike yours (Your sarcasm was too thin to notice for me)

  • LustyArgonian
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    53 months ago

    I wonder what will happen to those prisoners once climate change gets even worse

    • @UnderpantsWeevil
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      Texas inmates are being ‘cooked to death’ in extreme heat, complaint alleges

      With the threat of another hot summer ahead, advocates asked a federal judge to declare 100-degree-plus conditions in uncooled Texas facilities unconstitutional.

      The filing came from four nonprofit organizations who are joining a lawsuit originally filed last August by Bernie Tiede, an inmate who suffered a medical crisis after being housed in a Huntsville cell that reached temperatures exceeding 110 degrees. Tiede, a well-known offender whose 1996 murder of a wealthy widow inspired the film “Bernie,” was moved to an air-conditioned cell following a court order but he’s not guaranteed to stay there this year.

      Concentration Camps.

  • @raspberriesareyummy
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    53 months ago

    I wish for the responsible judges, politicians and CEOs to get spat in the face by their own children for being the disgusting vile pieces of shit that they are. Sadly, too often, the apple does not fall far enough from the tree.