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Moral Maze

The Morality of Climate Activism

Moral Maze

BBC

Society & Culture, Religion & Spirituality

4.4623 Ratings

🗓️ 21 July 2023

⏱️ 57 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Wimbledon, the Ashes, the Proms and George Osborne’s wedding have all been interrupted by ‘Just Stop Oil’ protesters in recent days. Several areas of London have been brought to a standstill, provoking the ire of motorists and leading to multiple arrests. ‘Just Stop Oil’ describes itself as a “nonviolent civil resistance group demanding the UK Government stop licensing all new oil, gas and coal projects”. The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said he wouldn't be “giving in to eco-zealots” disrupting the British summer.

The group’s supporters believe that blocking traffic, interrupting sporting events and vandalising artwork, are entirely proportionate in the face of an existential crisis bequeathed to our children and grandchildren. Right now, they argue, parts of Europe are literally on fire, and there is no more time left to wait for those in power to do the right thing. Their critics object to the fact that the targets of the protests are often ordinary people, who have more immediate concerns like the rising cost of living. Moreover, some believe the use of apocalyptic language is less likely to elicit a change in behaviour, since despair, like indifference, is not a good motivator.

How might our descendants judge today’s climate activists? Successful movements for social change, like the Suffragettes, have historically been disrupters who, in the face of inaction, adopt increasingly radical tactics. For some, the spirit they embody is irrepressible and necessary, which means that their methods cannot always be peaceful. For others, social progress can only be fully achieved through conventional democratic means.

Are acts of civil disobedience and sabotage by climate activists morally justifiable?

Producer: Dan Tierney.

Transcript

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0:00.0

BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, podcasts.

0:04.8

Good evening. Nothing is sacred this summer if you're fired up about global warming.

0:09.8

The Just Stop Oil Group has disrupted the ashes, Wimbledon, the Chelsea Flower Show and the proms.

0:15.5

Works of Art have been attacked.

0:17.3

They're also threatening to bring London to a standstill in their campaign to force

0:21.4

the government that they call murderous to stop licensing new fossil fuel projects. Tempers are

0:28.1

boiled over. The Prime Minister has said we mustn't give in to eco-zealots. It's all justified,

0:34.5

they say, by what they regard as a potentially terminal threat to humanity,

0:38.7

made manifest this week in near record temperatures in southern Europe and across the United States and China.

0:44.8

Is it justified? How will history see them?

0:48.3

Pioneer visionaries mobilising in the face of an existential crisis,

0:52.4

or an hysterical nuisance whose disruptive actions and

0:56.0

apocalyptic language alienated those they sought to persuade. History has been generally

1:01.8

kind to the suffragettes, after all, forgetting or disregarding their bombing campaign,

1:07.6

which surely fell within modern definitions of terrorism.

1:17.0

What, if anything, justifies breaking the law, civil disobedience or sabotage?

1:18.8

That's our moral maze tonight.

1:23.6

The panel, Mona Siddiqui, Professor of Islamic and Interreligious Studies at Edinburgh University,

1:33.0

Matthew Taylor, Chief Executive of the NHS Confederation, the historian Tim Stanley, and the commentator and campaigner Inaya Falarin Imman.

1:35.3

Inaya, what do you make of just-stop oil?

1:40.5

I mean, I find it deeply frustrating when people say they are morally courageous and brave.

1:41.2

They are not.

...

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