A "Green Sabbath" & Climate Lockdowns/Gross Green Austerity

Karlysymon

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The BBC has seen evidence that protests against the supposed "climate lockdown" in Oxford are being planned in 2023. Promotional material has been shared online by groups known for spreading conspiracy theories, including about Covid-19 and vaccines.

So is the social media storm likely to die down then?

"The people who are spreading this misinformation will continue to do so," said Ms Leffman, urging caution to other councils.
"This is going to happen in other parts of the country, because I don't think we're going to be the only city that will make the decision to limit traffic."
 

Karlysymon

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Not sure why Reuters and BBC's "Climate disinfo specialist" didn't factcheck the Telegraph's claims of a return to feudalism. Maybe because the author of the Telegraph article used to sit on one of those local councils and is fully aware of what this is all about.

In the 11th century, when Oxford University was founded, the King recorded his control of land and people in the Domesday Book, a catalogue of feudal authority. Under that serfdom, a man couldn’t simply travel to another place without the permission of his lords and masters. Now Oxford’s 21st century city fathers want to reintroduce these controls in the form of a concept known as the “15-minute city”.

The 15-minute city sounds lovely in theory; a place where you can find all the goods, services and amenities you need within a gentle quarter of an hour’s walk. It’s the brainchild of Paris-based academic Carlos Moreno, who sees cities not as places made by the choices of citizens but as complex systems to be managed with “smart” technology. And Moreno wants urban planners to manage the city’s inhabitants as well. His ideal relies on a set of controls and limits imposed, in true feudal style, on residents.

In Oxford, and in a similar scheme in Canterbury, councils will require residents to have a permit to work elsewhere in the city and will limit the number of times they can drive across the boundary of their allocated 15-minute zone. If you don’t comply, the city’s automatic number-plate recognition systems will allow the council to levy a £70 fine.

The scheme won’t affect Duncan Enright, the Oxfordshire councillor leading its introduction, since he doesn’t live in Oxford, but he helpfully explains that it is about “those essential needs, the bottle of milk, pharmacy, GP, schools which you need to have” and that it is all part of the council’s plans for net zero. Or to put it another way, you’ll need a permit to visit your mum a few streets away and can only do this twice a week.

The stated purpose of the Oxford and Canterbury schemes – reducing congestion in their city centres – hides an authoritarianism commonplace in contemporary urban planning.

These modern urbanists believe it is a terrible thing for people to enjoy the flexibility, comfort and efficiency of affordable private transport. Despite the forced shift to electric vehicles and the elimination of fumes and carbon emissions, green planners still want to ban the car.

The 15-minute city seeks to limit the freedom and choice people get from driving, in the name of the environment. Moreno has even spoken of exploiting the pandemic to impose his ideas. “Were it not for Covid-19,” he said in a recent interview, “I think that the conditions for deploying the 15-minute city concept would have been very hard to instigate.”

The 15-minute city aims for a radical remake, not of the city, but of daily life. In what we could call neo-feudalism,
urban planners see citizens as counters to be moved about within smart cities; peons not people. They seek to reduce the choices available to residents – making their lives worse, not better.

For the grander and wealthier parts of a city, places that already have that vegan cafe or award-winning deli, the impact of a 15-minute cordon around your life may be tolerable. But poorer people in a place without these amenities – where the only shop is an overpriced convenience store without fresh fruit and vegetables – will suffer greatly for such policies.

The 15-minute city isn’t merely anti-car and anti-choice, it echoes the social controls and limits of communist China. This might be fine for Oxford’s guilty rich but for ordinary workers, already struggling with housing costs in one of Britain’s least affordable places, the 15-minute city will only make life more limited, more expensive and less free."
 

Karlysymon

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Karlysymon

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But where is the evidence of this climate crisis that these well funded scientists and activists keep talking about? Where are the weather effects? One can see the very tangible results of our ongoing economic crisis; inflation and high prices, floundering consumers relying on credit cards, mass layoffs in the tech industry spreading to other sectors, etc. People are experiencing the downturn and they can witness the consequences for themselves. If the climate cult wants people to take them seriously, they will have to show some kind of visible proof that global warming is real and a legitimate threat.

The problem is, they have no proof, and so they are forced to dishonestly connect every single bad weather event to “climate change” as a means to frighten the public.
 

Karlysymon

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Both of these videos deserve to be reposted because of the sobering prospect of a future defined by programmed digital money and 15 minute neighbourhoods.
6mins

15mins
 
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