Anonymous ID: be6587 Aug. 1, 2019, 5:28 a.m. No.7291648   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Google’s celeb-obsessed search for climate change answers is a hypocritical joke

 

https://nypost.com/2019/07/31/googles-celeb-obsessed-search-for-climate-change-answers-is-a-hypocritical-joke/

 

It doesn’t get more hypocritical than A-listers jetting in on private planes to bemoan climate change at Google’s private party in Sicily this week.

 

The Gulfstreams, mega-yachts and gas-guzzling Maserati SUVs used to ferry the wokerati around the seaside Google Camp have been spewing out greenhouse gases at the rate of small nations.

 

Former President Barack Obama, actor Leonardo DiCaprio, singer Katy Perry and Prince Harry are said to be among 300 guests invited by Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin to their luxurious annual shindig which has been dubbed “Davos by the Sea.”

 

Either they don’t believe climate change is the big problem they keep saying it is, or they just don’t care enough about saving the planet to give up their perks.

 

But they can hardly lecture the rest of us on prudent management of the earth’s environment when they’re burning up more than 300 gallons of diesel an hour on their private yachts or spewing tons of CO2 into the air from their private jets.

 

Whether it’s the megawatts of power consumed by the sound system at a dusk concert or the bright lights illuminating the ruins of the Temple of Hera where the Google Campers dined under the stars on Monday night, their eco-indulgence knows no bounds.

 

For instance, the swanky Verdura resort where they’re staying, on Sicily’s southwestern coast, might have won a sustainability award, but it’s all relative.

 

It still features three water-guzzling golf courses, and the whopping carbon footprint of a 60m power hungry infinity pool, four outdoor thalassotherapy pools, steam baths, saunas, dozens of plunge pools and a private beach filled with imported sand flown in using more carbon miles.

 

Enlarge ImagePrince Harry even gave a “barefoot speech” to the billionaires about the need to save the environment, as Page Six reports, only days after vowing that he would confine himself to siring only two children as his personal contribution to saving the planet.

 

It doesn’t get much sillier than being lectured on carbon footprints by a prince whose family rattles around in multiple palaces. Unless you count the imminent visit to New York by Swedish teenage eco-evangelist Greta Thunberg, a favorite of Harry’s wife Meghan, who has just placed her on the cover of the September issue of British vogue she has spent all year “guest editing.”

 

Thunberg was invited to lecture the United Nations on climate change next month but, unlike the Google campers, at least the child tries to practice what she preaches, and refused to pollute the air by flying.

 

It took another eco-conscious nobleman, this time from Monaco’s royal family, to come to her rescue with the offer of his racing yacht to sail her across the Atlantic on wind power.

 

No doubt Harry and Meghan would approve.

Anonymous ID: be6587 Aug. 1, 2019, 5:42 a.m. No.7291756   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1781 >>1822 >>1827 >>1838 >>1852

Brit student, 19, 'jumped to her death after breaking open plane door' on Madagascar trip

 

https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/795435/cambridge-student-alana-cutland-dead-madagascar-plane

 

Alana Cutland, 19, tragically died in Madagascar after falling nearly 3,500ft from a Cessna light aircraft she was travelling in.

 

Investigators in the African country claimed the teenager - who studied Natural Sciences at the University of Cambridge - fought off a fellow passenger, Brit tourist Ruth Johnson, after breaking open the door.

 

Ruth is reported to have tried to hang on to the girl's leg to stop her jumping to her death.

 

But police in Madagascar said she was able to free herself from Ruth and the pilot's "exhausted" grip before falling from the tiny propeller plane into the savannah below.

 

STRUGGLES: She had reportedly suffered anxiety attacks in Madagascar

 

Cops in the Indian Ocean island nation have been trying to find Alana's body in the wild and remote region of Analalava, but fear they will never find her.

 

Police chief for the region Sinola Nomenjahary said they had recreated the terrifying moment onboard the aircraft after taking statements from Ruth and the pilot.

 

Nomenjahary told The Sun: "The Cessna C168 aircraft was taking off from Anjajavy with three people aboard, including Ms Johnson, Alana and the pilot.

 

"After 10 minutes of flight, Alana undid her seatbelt and unlocked the right door of the plane and tried to get out.

 

"Ms Johnson fought for five minutes trying to hold her, but when she was exhausted and out of breath she let go."

 

He added: "Alana then intentionally fell from an aircraft at 1,130m above sea level."

 

Alana had been due to stay in Madagascar for six weeks on a self-funded research trip, but cut it short after eight days when she spoke to her parents Alison and Neil, both 63.

 

She had been working on an animal biology project studying crabs on the beaches of Madagascar and was hosted by the Anjajavy Lodge.

 

Investigators claimed the student suffered five "paranoia attacks" while on the trip.