Climate activists frequently employ war analogies. Prince Charles has likened the climate threat “to Britain’s battle against Nazi Germany in World War II.”
Al Gore has invoked the spirit of Churchill, lamenting that the public refuses to understand that the danger is “as urgent as that from Hitler.”
Hollywood filmmaker James Cameron has called for “a mobilization to tackle climate change, of a scale similar to that of World War II.”
But while prominent people say there’s a climate crisis, their behavior says something else. Such individuals almost never walk the talk.
They urge politicians to take action, to impose carbon taxes on ordinary people (these are intended to curb travel by making it too expensive), yet they themselves don’t hesitate to jump on a jet.
Witness Prince Harry who, before and after delivering a speech about the environment recently, nevertheless traveled by private plane.
In the 2016 video at the top of this post, Leonardo DiCaprio compares the fight against climate change to another historical struggle, the one against slavery. He declares himself “absolutely terrified.”
He says there’s “a runaway freight train bringing with it an impending disaster for all living things.” He talks about honor and dishonor, and says there should be “no more excuses.”
Yet there’s no indication whatsoever that this man has abandoned his gas-guzzling private jets, his mega yachts, his multiple mansions, or his private island off the coast of Central America’s Belize. I assure you, people don’t arrive on that island by canoe.
Words are cheap. Deeds are what matter.
What does real leadership look like? Let us turn to the iconic video series, Band of Brothers, about US paratroopers during WW2.
Here’s how Richard Winters, the commander of Easy Company, talks about leadership on page 287 of his own memoirs [bold added]:
The Infantry School at Fort Benning, Georgia, has defined leadership in just two words via its motto: “Follow Me!” Never ask your team to do something you wouldn’t do yourself.
When I hit the ground [on D-Day] armed only with a trench knife…I grabbed the first trooper I could find, and said, “Follow me!”
Real leaders don’t invent excuses as to why they themselves are exempt. When politicians, members of royal families, and Hollywood celebrities start behaving, en masse, like there’s a climate crisis, that will be an important turning point.
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Hollywood on stopping the earths fever…. fall into two camps extremely stupid or those using their acting skills to sell a massive fraud . They are hypocrites no denying that .
They should stick to acting and leave the lying to the rent seekers and sleazy politicians .
He’s acting. It’s what he does.
My neighbours follow him. They talk the talk, forget the second part.
At one point I thought Leo was a decent actor. Given what he’s done lately, not so much. And I won’t pay a penny to go to any movies starring him or any of his fellow travelers.