Are you a climate change hypocrite? Here’s why you shouldn’t worry

Bennet Francis, University of Reading

Standing on the deck of Berta Cáceres, the now-iconic pink boat, Emma Thompson addressed a sprawling crowd of protestors and gave a slew of media interviews. It was April 2019, Extinction Rebellion had occupied Oxford Circus in London, and the actress was eager to lend her headline-generating celebrity status to the group’s cause.

As it turned out, however, the tabloids told a different story. “Dame Emma Jets 5,400 Miles to Show How Green She Is!”, the Daily Mail crowed. In subsequent months, it went on to gloat “Emma Thompson Admits She is a Hypocrite for Flying Round the World While Protesting Climate Change”, as if to confirm its initial cod-outrage had been vindicated.

The charge of hypocrisy is slippery. It tends to get thrown around in a moralistic tone, but does it really have anything to do with morality at all? Did Emma Thompson really do anything worse than the millions of others who take long-haul flights each year and don’t receive the same criticism?

As the philosopher Judith Shklar argued, hypocrisy is more like an exposed flank on the battlefield of ideas than a genuinely blameworthy character trait. The charge of hypocrisy is used against political opponents to generate what she called “psychic annihilation”: it can force them to lose faith in their deeply held political beliefs and convictions, without having to offer alternatives.

Criticising someone on the basis of moral principles usually implies you endorse those principles. By mocking Thompson’s hypocrisy, however, the Mail succeeded in making her cause appear less worthy, without having to pretend to be particularly virtuous itself.

So when climate activists are accused of hypocrisy, it is less a problem for the hypocrites themselves than a problem for the cause of climate advocacy. Anti-hypocritical discourse can be more pernicious than the hypocrisy it attacks – the sight of our well-meaning but imperfect neighbours in the pillory is often enough to convince us that striving to better ourselves isn’t worth the social risk.

Such arguments descend, in Cambridge professor David Runciman’s words, into “second-order hypocrisy”, or hypocrisy about how hypocritical we must necessarily be. A puritanical obsession with casting out insincerity can actually undermine public standards. If people become convinced that only saintly true believers pass muster, the rules-based order can start to break down.

Hypocrisy you should be worried about

Is it high time we stopped moralising about hypocrisy completely, then? The story isn’t over, because in certain contexts, hypocrisy can take on a more worrying aspect. The next major UN climate summit, known as COP26 and currently scheduled to be held in Glasgow in November, has been leveraged by the UK government for a ready supply of chauvinistic rhetoric, treated as a platform for the country to claim “world leader” status. There is even speculation that the “Festival of Brexit” originally planned by previous prime minister Theresa May is set to morph into an “eco-jamboree” of climate-themed boosterism for “Global Britain”.

The current UK government’s eagerness to signal its moral authority on the world stage is, however, at odds with its actual policy. While COP26 president Alok Sharma has been attempting to get other countries to sign up to phasing out coal power and combustion-powered vehicles, at home the government has declined to overrule plans to open a new coal mine for the first time in 30 years.

As it stands, the decision will now be put to a public inquiry, and therefore likely delayed until after COP26. The failure to nix the project went against the advice of the government’s own Climate Change Committee.

Here we see a different face of hypocrisy: hypocrisy as an abuse of power. Making a special case of yourself involves treating similar cases differently, a type of unfairness. But the problem is more than that. There is something distinctly objectionable about using your authority to influence the behaviour of others, while refusing to submit yourself to the same principles.

This is embodied in the old republican idea that we should strive for an “empire of laws and not of men”, where political leaders and private citizens alike should expect to be subject to the same standards.

We can, and should, treat the hypocrisy in a case like Emma Thompson’s differently from the hypocrisy of the UK government. Unless politically powerful agents apply the same standards to themselves, attempts to control or influence the behaviour of others must be seen as illegitimate. They are instances of arbitrary power, and therefore oppressive and illiberal.

While the average activist needn’t lose sleep about their own hypocrisy, then, the hypocrisy of those with real power – governments, their agencies and representatives – should be a cause for genuine concern. In an ideal world, it is here the tabloids would be focusing their attack.

Bennet Francis, Leverhulme Doctoral Scholar in Climate Justice, University of Reading

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Chris Hanley
May 6, 2021 3:02 pm

The term ‘climate justice’ implies a moral or ethical element and that is how the author frames his article but that assumes a system of values that everyone adheres to, I don’t.
For instance trying to deny two thirds of the world’s population access to the lifestyle that say Bennet Francis enjoys is profoundly unjust IMO.

n.n
Reply to  Chris Hanley
May 6, 2021 3:21 pm

Climate justice in the same vein as social justice, which is an ethical religion (i.e. moral philosophy’s relativistic sibling), sometimes selective, often opportunistic, always politically congruent.

Alan the Brit
Reply to  Chris Hanley
May 7, 2021 12:18 am

But that is precisely the whole point! These wealthy ruling intellectual elites simply don’t want to sit on a West Indian sun drenched beach, being able to here the sounds of the uneducated, unwashed, peasants enjoying the luxuries they feel should be the preserve of said elites!!! Hence the campaign against cheap flights, only the wealthy elites should be able to fly to exotic destinations, any peasants encountered are merely there carrying a tray of very expensive cocktails!!!! Just a guess!!!! 😉

Russell Johnson
May 6, 2021 3:03 pm

You are a climate change hypocrite if you believe human CO2 causes CC!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Abolition Man
Reply to  Russell Johnson
May 6, 2021 5:42 pm

Russell,
Only if you exhale!

n.n
May 6, 2021 4:33 pm

Rebel for Pro-Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness. Who could… who would disagree? Think of the grandmas. Close Planned Parent/hood.

Craig from Oz
May 6, 2021 10:53 pm

Did Emma Thompson really do anything worse than the millions of others who take long-haul flights each year and don’t receive the same criticism?

Yes.

The vast majority of those millions have absolutely no problem with millions of other people traveling internationally if they want to.

Emma made claims that EVERYONE (except her apparently) needs to change their habits in order to save the world.

Ergo, Emma is a hypocrite.

Alan the Brit
Reply to  Craig from Oz
May 7, 2021 12:21 am

“Did Emma Thompson really do anything worse than the millions of others who take long-haul flights each year and don’t receive the same criticism?”

AND all done in the same day, LA to London & back first class, oh what a privilege!!!!!

Craig from Oz
May 6, 2021 11:05 pm

As the philosopher Judith Shklar argued, hypocrisy is more like an exposed flank on the battlefield of ideas than a genuinely blameworthy character trait.

Wow.

I would be more inclined to say that Judith is a word salad in the smorgasbord of all expenses paid conferences.

What is she actually saying?

Exposed flanks can cause your entire battle to collapse, but only if your opponent has the means and awareness to act on the opportunity. In other situations flanks are only exposed for as long as your opponents can catch them, leading to mantra of mobile warfare in which speed is protection. (basically – if you are successfully advancing, keep advancing as they can only attack your flank(s) if they can catch you. Stay inside your opponent’s decision cycle and they will be reacting to you, not acting against you.)

(or exposed flanks are bad… right up until you can ignore them)

(also see “over extended”. Battlefields are complex and dynamic places)

Also remember, the Moral High Ground is a great place to deploy your artillery. 😀

Vincent Causey
May 6, 2021 11:39 pm

So, according to this article, Emma Thompson’s hypocrisy of allowing herself to lead a life that she would deny others is not a bad thing, whereas the governments hypocrisy in providing cheap and reliable energy to their own people is a bad thing and tantamount to tyranny. Hmm, somewhere along the way the argument has gone horribly wrong.

AGW is Not Science
Reply to  Vincent Causey
May 7, 2021 7:14 am

Logical fallacies, anyone?!

But then I guess we can’t expect any logic or reason from someone pimping “climate justice.” Maybe we should interview the bats and birds being killed by wind turbine blades and the people in sub-Saharan Africa who still don’t have clean water or electricity, and see how they are enjoying all the “climate justice.” :-O

Ian Coleman
May 7, 2021 2:41 am

Well, if Charles Manson had condemned mass murder the condemnation of mass murder would still have been valid.

On the other hand, Emma Thompson gets to enjoy the luxuries that she can buy while at the same time advocating for policies that will cause economic contractions that will sabotage other people’s freedom to also get rich. So that kind of stings.

You don’t really see that many climate change enthusiasts who are not at least upper middle class. They’ve got theirs but you can’t have it too. Tough luck, pal.

May 7, 2021 6:07 am

I live near Emma Thompson in NW London. She lives in a very large and expensive house. Whilst there’s nothing wrong with living in a large and expensive house, what it costs to heat will have a large “carbon footprint”. Why isn’t she living in a small flat if she wants to save the world?
She’s the definition of hypocrisy.

May 7, 2021 6:17 am

I went to that stupid XR demo at Oxford Circus in the the centre of London, just so I could laugh at the hippies. What amused me most was that the pink boat was made of…. plastic. The signs the daft hippies were waving were made of ….. plastic. Their jackets, shoes, and tents were all made of …. plastic. And the record decks the DJ was playing awful music on was made of… you guessed it… plastic.
Oh, and the boat was towed there by a truck that used, um, fossil fuels. Bunch of hippie hypocrites.

(NB One of the eco-zealots tried to thrust a leaflet in my hand. I asked her if she knew about the science behind climate change and she replied, “Yes, I know all about it!”. I asked her for her thoughts on the logarithmic heating effect of CO2 compared to atmospheric concentration. She replied that she didn’t know what I was talking about. I smiled and she stomped off.)

Old Cocky
May 7, 2021 4:03 pm

The last conversation involving similar reasoning which I was engaged in may have owed a little to the carton of Coopers Pale Ale

yirgach
May 8, 2021 3:12 pm

So now we have Berta Cáceres joining the list of modern day martyrs and saints. At least she did not bring the ugly baggage of that thug Michael Brown or the drug addict George Floyd.

But they will figure out a way to incite violence and burning regardless.
They just have to. Because Climate and Humans.