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  • On tonight's panel -

  • Grant Shapps, the Government's Transport Secretary, former Minister

  • and Chairman of the Conservative Party under David Cameron.

  • A Labour MP for nearly 10 years,

  • former Shadow Secretary for Energy and Climate Change, Lisa Nandy.

  • Rupert Read, Professor of Philosophy at East Anglia University,

  • former Green Party candidate and now spokesperson for climate

  • change campaigners Extinction Rebellion.

  • Journalist and breakfast host on talk radio, Julia Hartley-Brewer.

  • And businessmen and guest Dragon on the BBC's Dragons' Den,

  • Theo Paphitis.

  • APPLAUSE

  • Welcome very much to our panel, to our audience here

  • and, of course, to you at home.

  • Join in the conversation, you can argue along in the usual way,

  • #BBCQT, on Facebook, on Instagram and on Twitter.

  • We'd like to hear what you've got to say.

  • So, let's hear our first question tonight, which is from Sally Knight.

  • Should climate change activists be applauded or arrested?

  • Lisa.

  • Well, I really support what's happened in the last few weeks and

  • I don't say that lightly, but the reason I say it is because I've been

  • a member of Parliament now for nearly 10 years

  • and over that time, I've seen how this is an issue, the most

  • important issue of our time, that is always kicked into the long grass.

  • Because there's always something that is supposedly more

  • important, always something that is supposedly more pressing

  • and I think without those young people going out on climate strike,

  • without the protests that we're seeing in the streets,

  • this issue just quite simply would not be on the agenda,

  • but what really matters now is what happens next,

  • because there's a chance now

  • to build a really broad coalition that will keep that pressure up.

  • Why do we need to keep the pressure up?

  • Because we're not even on track to meet our net zero target by 2050.

  • The reason for that is actually Grant's department, transport, where

  • we're actually going backwards in terms of emissions, not forwards.

  • And I suppose the only thing I would say to the protesters,

  • many of whom I really admire so far,

  • is that you've got to take people with you on this journey.

  • There is no point in telling people in towns like Wigan

  • to get out of their cars when our trains and our buses have been

  • brought to a standstill for the last two years.

  • This has got to be a positive agenda about creating the clean

  • energy jobs in towns like mine,

  • jobs that were lost when the mines closed many years ago, about warmer

  • homes, about better futures for our young people

  • and about a better environment,

  • and if we make common cause with people who are trying to, to,

  • to improve the daily lives of ordinary people in this country,

  • I think this is a battle that we'll win, we'll start

  • to take action and we'll build a better Britain in the process.

  • APPLAUSE

  • Theo. What's your view?

  • Well, I think the argument is undeniable,

  • although I think there's a bloke across the pond that is denying

  • it's ever happening, but we'll put him to one side for the moment.

  • Because it's not very important here tonight.

  • But the reality is the argument is undeniable.

  • The method is ridiculous

  • because I've just come back from my company conference. Two days,

  • I had 500 colleagues there and I've got to tell you, climate change

  • was the number one question we had for discussion at that conference.

  • We've got so many things for our business,

  • everybody's tuned in on the environment, sustainability,

  • climate change and what our business is doing,

  • and in fact they even voted that now we should plant every...

  • this year, a tree for every colleague we hire

  • and that we already have.

  • That's over 4,000 trees for this year and they're saying

  • they'd rather have that spent out of our bonus pot.

  • That's how important it is, so we don't need people to get

  • superglue, stick it on somebody else's butt

  • and hang around there for two days, stopping them going to work,

  • stopping them going to a hospital, stopping them going through their

  • normal, everyday lives, where they work to put food on the table for

  • their children, a roof over their head and to lead a normal life.

  • That just is not acceptable.

  • Sally, what's your view? As you asked the question.

  • I think it's really interesting, Lisa, that you used

  • the word "protester," because I deliberately worded the question

  • "activist," which is suggesting that I support, absolutely support

  • the cause and it's absolutely right that this is highlighted

  • and that governments worldwide take notice.

  • But I agree with Theo that the methods...

  • I really don't applaud at all

  • and I think for normal people just trying to get to work,

  • do the right thing, it really is deplorable

  • and I just think there are better ways to grab headlines.

  • So, Rupert, what do you think when you hear that?

  • Because you want to take people with you.

  • Well, I think the first thing to say is, if there are better methods,

  • honestly, I'm all ears because I've been in this game for a long time.

  • I've been working in non-governmental organisations,

  • in the Green Party for many years, knocking on doors, etc,

  • and do you know what? None of it worked, right.

  • Earlier on this year, we're still on the same trajectory to

  • disaster as we have been for the past 20 years but then what happens?

  • In April, we had Extinction Rebellion

  • and the first glimmer of starting to change, we managed to push

  • the issue up the agenda when a thousand of us brave souls,

  • and it's because of them,

  • it's because of those 2,000 people now of ours who've been arrested.

  • You're deluded! Excuse me, let me just finish this point, it's key.

  • It's because of those 2,000 people that have been arrested,

  • yeah, that I have the privilege of being here on this panel this

  • evening at all, right, otherwise I wouldn't be here, yeah.

  • But look, what I do want to acknowledge is this,

  • there's a reason why the story hasn't worked until recently.

  • And the reason is that the problem feels too remote,

  • so, yeah, after April, a lot more people said, "We agree,

  • "climate change is an emergency."

  • But it still feels too remote to people,

  • it doesn't feel like an emergency.

  • So, you know, those of you who are there thinking, "Well,

  • "is it really quite as bad as they're saying?"

  • I get where you're coming from. I understand that.

  • I tried for 20 years in the old methods and the old story

  • and it doesn't work, so here's my message this evening.

  • We're changing up.

  • We're changing up in terms of our methods,

  • nonviolent civil disobedience, the same thing that succeeded for

  • the Suffragettes, for Martin Luther King, for Gandhi

  • and many others besides, and we're changing up with the message,

  • so my message to you tonight is forget about 2050,

  • forget about rising sea levels, forget about polar bears

  • and penguins, precious and beautiful though they are,

  • this is about us now.

  • This is about the fact that last summer,

  • the crops in this country were

  • failing as they were baked in the fields.

  • This is about the vulnerability of our food supply.

  • This is not even about our children or our grandchildren any more.

  • This is about the intense vulnerability of our whole society

  • to this catastrophe that is already descending on us.

  • That's why we're at London City Airport today,

  • showing some of that vulnerability.

  • That's why we need to be out there until that message gets through

  • and starts to really, really change.

  • OK, let's hear a little bit from the audience here.

  • The man in the denim jacket.

  • Obviously we all know that the environment is a huge issue.

  • I myself follow a plant-based diet because of it,

  • but it's interesting that you talk about the methods. For me,

  • a load of people dancing in the street, probably off their head

  • and, you know... No. ..dreadlocked, soap dodgers...

  • You may be maligning a whole group of people there,

  • I'd just like to say. There's no drugs or alcohol

  • at Extinction Rebellion events.

  • I think it's the wrong type of people who are putting out

  • this message. There is a real argument for the environment

  • and it's completely painting the wrong picture,

  • and as Theo said, it's stopping people going to work,

  • it's causing normal people problems and it shouldn't be.

  • It should be a problem that we all adopt

  • and we all change our regular lifestyles for and I think

  • when you see these people dancing in the street, it's not a protest,

  • it's just a field day, and I think it's really important that we

  • make this a proper issue and not make it look stupid.

  • Rupert, I know you want to come back in and I'll let you.

  • I'm just going to get round the audience a little bit.

  • Yes, you in the front, you wanted to say something.

  • I do worry about some of the younger people who are seeing this

  • and thinking it's an appropriate thing for them to do,

  • potentially then getting criminal records and then potentially harming

  • their future employment prospects by having a criminal record which then

  • means certain job opportunities aren't available to them.

  • Man in the classes.

  • One individual called Greta Thunberg, we know,

  • we understand her, she's actually garnered

  • a lot of support as an individual around the world and

  • whether you like her attitude or not, she's actually done that.

  • Whereas what we have now is our activists in London,

  • we're actually alienating people against them.

  • I think that's starting to destroy the argument

  • and they need to be very careful.

  • The woman in the yellow sweater here.

  • I was going to reference an article a few days ago

  • where you spoke about the need to perhaps refer to this

  • as an extermination event rather than an extinction event,

  • because that's too passive

  • and I wondered what the panel thought of that.

  • And do you support the action that's been taken by Extinction Rebellion?

  • SHE SIGHS I do. I do, yes, fundamentally.

  • With a big sigh. I do, yes.

  • I think it's sad that they're being arrested rather than applauded.

  • I think that's a waste of police time.

  • APPLAUSE

  • Rupert, I'll come back to you in a minute, just let me hear

  • a little bit from the rest of the panel. Julia.

  • Look, absolutely I think we should be tackling environmental issues,

  • moving towards renewable fuels, cleaning up our waste

  • and our oceans and looking after our planet,

  • but there is nothing in any of the science, nothing in any

  • of the IPCC reports that suggests we're heading towards a catastrophe,

  • a crisis, mass extermination or anything of the sort.

  • This is scaremongering of the worst kind.

  • Well, the UN says we have "12 years to limit global temperature

  • "rise to 1.5 degrees and urgent, unprecedented changes are needed."

  • Well, no, what it says is if, if we do actually want to try

  • and prevent a 1.5 degrees...there's a two thirds chance we can do that

  • if we do address those issues, but there's no, there's not

  • necessarily a catastrophe that results if we don't do that.

  • The Earth has been warmer than that,

  • but the key thing is what we have to do in order to achieve that.

  • What Extinction Rebellion are doing and what they want, which is very,

  • very different from what has been discussed by other climate

  • activists over the years, is the net zero global, of carbon

  • emissions by 2025 is achievable not by getting rid of diesel cars

  • or perhaps people having a bit of an extra tax on their flights

  • to Majorca on holiday,

  • we are talking about getting rid of all cars,

  • all buses, all trains, all central heating, all flights,

  • having state rationing of meat, this is what it will actually involve.

  • It's impossible to achieve that target otherwise.

  • This is about taking us back to a preindustrial age.

  • Now, we're told constantly this is a terrible thing,

  • industrialisation has been a terrible thing.

  • Industrialisation, the Industrial Revolution is the greatest thing

  • that's ever happened to mankind.

  • It has delivered longer, healthier, happier,

  • more fulfilling lives for billions more people than anything

  • else that has ever been achieved by our planet.

  • The best time to be alive is right now, apart from tomorrow.

  • Whatever the issues are regarding climate change, they will be

  • sold by technological innovation by the markets, by governments,

  • yes, getting together and by a sensible debate based on the facts.

  • What we've got with Extinction Rebellion, I'm afraid, is not

  • a sensible debate based on science or the facts. It is to all intents

  • and purposes a sort of quasi-religious death cult

  • and I for one think it's

  • absolutely insane that people are listening to their absurd demands.

  • Rupert...would you like to respond to that?

  • Quasi-religious death cult.

  • Well, look, I apologise to the young man for not having a nose ring

  • and I apologise for not being a part of any cult.

  • In fact, I take a lot of my prompting from the United Nations,

  • from the IPCC who repeatedly say in their most recent report

  • "to limit global overheat to 1.5 degrees,"

  • which is considered the threshold for danger,

  • "we need rapid, far-reaching and unprecedented changes in all

  • "aspects of society" and why we're back is to say, "Where's the action?

  • "Where's the action towards that goal?"

  • Today, those famous eco-extremists,

  • the International Monetary Fund said this,

  • "the risk of catastrophic and irreversible disaster is rising,

  • "implying potentially infinite costs of unmitigated climate change,

  • "including human extinction."

  • Now, if that's not a licence for the kind of thing that we're saying

  • and doing, I'm not sure what is. Greta Thunberg was mentioned.

  • I have the privilege of knowing Greta Thunberg

  • and I asked her in public when she was here in April to support

  • our first rebellion,

  • "What's your view of Extinction Rebellion, Greta?"

  • And her reply was very simple, she said, "I support it wholeheartedly."

  • And do you know what?

  • At the end of the day, this isn't about whether or not you feel

  • sort of warm towards Extinction Rebellion, we don't really matter.

  • What matters is if we succeed in drawing attention to the issue

  • and if we succeed in managing to start to get at last

  • the action we need to stop ourselves driving ourselves over a cliff,

  • that's what it's about.

  • But, Rupert, don't you understand, you're acting like numpties.

  • You're turning people AWAY from the great cause that we all believe in.

  • We're talking about it now, I've just explained the cause

  • and actually I'm getting a decent amount of applause here,

  • so I kind of think we're doing all right. Still numpties. Let's...

  • APPLAUSE

  • Grant, you're sitting here very quietly.

  • Well, as Lisa rightly pointed out

  • when she was asked the question at first, my department,

  • the transport department, actually is responsible for a lot of the CO2.

  • Here's the thing that's not in doubt.

  • We HAVE to get a grip of this. I have no doubt about it at all.

  • 27% of the CO2 comes from transport, 90% of that is from vehicles

  • and there are some really easy things that we can do,

  • which is move, for example, towards electric cars,

  • electrification of the roads and that would be a very big first move.

  • I've got an electric car, it's fantastic, these are practical

  • steps we can take, but here's the thing I don't understand, Rupert.

  • We are living in the country,

  • the industrialised nation that's done more to move further

  • and faster to decarbonise than any other country in the world,

  • that's legislated to get to net zero, so rather than stopping people

  • from getting to work

  • and stopping people from meeting their hospital appointments,

  • go to a country which isn't doing any of these things

  • and protest there!

  • APPLAUSE

  • The man in the black sweater.

  • I just totally agree with what you've just said there.

  • Absolutely spot-on.

  • And instead of making it difficult for other people,

  • why don't you protest, like, peacefully

  • and protest outside the embassies

  • where they're not doing anything at all?

  • OK. The woman in the red sweater here. Yes, you.

  • I was in London today and at Charing Cross

  • and there was a whole line of people with, like, lead-type make-up

  • and wearing green and red, walking silently through the station.

  • And I made the presumption they were Extinction Rebellion

  • because they were all in the Trafalgar Square. They were, yeah.

  • I do applaud the sentiment behind it, however, it is

  • alienating a lot of people and for me personally, I do think that there

  • is a climate problem, I do think that we all need to do something,

  • however, for me, the person that's made the most impact on me

  • is Sir David Attenborough in the Blue Planet

  • when he said quite majestically, respectfully, the amount of plastic

  • that's in the ocean and that the whales

  • and the other creatures are swallowing, and for me,

  • that made a huge impact and it made me think

  • we all need to get together, all of us to do something small

  • to make an impact. And did it make you change your behaviour?

  • Out of interest. Yes, it did.

  • It made me take things seriously, because for him

  • to go on record to say that and the way he goes about saying it,

  • it made me pay attention and my nephew is six

  • and he watches the Blue Planet and I know that it will make

  • an impact on him and he is the future for us.

  • The man in the checked shirt.

  • I find it really incredible that, Grant, you can sit there

  • and say, let's look at other countries,

  • let's take some accountability here in the UK.

  • Lisa, I think what you said about public transport in northern

  • areas is so true and what I'd like to see is some

  • accountability from the Government around private car ownership

  • and taxing something that we know is incredibly dangerous

  • and investing that money into public transport, specifically

  • in northern regions, where systematically London's overfunded

  • and then northern regions are left where private car ownership

  • is a necessity.

  • The woman in the yellow sweater.

  • I was held up by the Extinction Rebellion protesters earlier

  • today and I was late picking my son up from school as a result

  • and he was in floods of tears, desperately upset

  • because I wasn't there when he expected me to be,

  • but in 20 years' time, he's not going to remember that.

  • What he will remember is if we fail to now on this emergency.

  • We can cope with a bit of disruption now if it has the effect,

  • if it's actually taking action, a bit of disruption is nothing.

  • And what's next, Rupert?

  • I mean, the plan is this campaign will go on for the next two...

  • Do you anticipate it lasting the full fortnight

  • and then what happens after that?

  • Whether it lasts a full fortnight,

  • that depends on how many of the audience come and join me

  • after tonight and take to the barricades.

  • Look, in terms of the things that have just been said,

  • a couple of key points to respond to, the net zero target that the

  • Government has legislated for - great.

  • That wouldn't have happened without us.

  • That was outside of the window of political possibility

  • before the April rebellion came along

  • and our rebellion changed the figures, changed the figures

  • completely in terms of how important people thought the issues were.

  • This is fact, this is just straight fact.

  • Look at the polls before and after the rebellion.

  • After the rebellion, people suddenly start saying,

  • "The environment is a more important issue than an immigration,

  • "more important than the economy."

  • The first time that's ever happened in this country.

  • That's down to us.

  • Now, in terms of the figures you gave us,

  • Grant, about how well this country is doing.

  • You know, the first demand of Extinction Rebellion is tell

  • the truth and I just so wish that you would start telling the truth.

  • Which figures were wrong? I wish...

  • The figures where you claim that we're doing better than all

  • the other countries, right?

  • We've decarbonised faster than any other G20... No, no.

  • Those figures... Gas emissions and greenhouse gases have

  • come down faster than any other G7 since 2010.

  • Only if you exclude from those figures

  • all the figures for air travel and sea travel

  • and for all the products that we buy from China...

  • Same category for every country... No, no.

  • That doesn't change it for our country because

  • it's an international... Excuse me, it does change it because actually

  • we fly a lot more in this country then people do in other countries.

  • In the States? No, not in the States but in Europe. Oh.

  • So, when you get the figures right, when you tell the truth,

  • we're not doing well at all.

  • Our carbon emissions have barely come down since 1990.

  • Those are the facts and I just so wish... It's not true. It's true,

  • that is the truth.

  • I've written on this, I so wish you would look into it.

  • I so wish you would start telling the truth. I have the numbers here.

  • In terms of the thing about other countries and saying,

  • "Oh, why don't you go and protest in China," whatever.

  • Our rebellion is worldwide, right?

  • What we started here is being exported all over the world.

  • A great British export.

  • It's completely peaceful, completely non-violent and as the

  • lady so rightly said, it's disruptive

  • but you want to see real disruption?

  • Crop failures, right.

  • Children not knowing whether they're going to have

  • a future at all, that's the real disruption.

  • Sorry, this is absolute nonsense. This is Malthus on crack cocaine.

  • This is the stuff that's been predicted,

  • this sort of nihilistic, the world is going to end stuff.

  • The IPCC...

  • The IPCC is not predicting any of that, there is nothing in the

  • science, nothing in the documents,

  • or in any of the IPCC's reports which is predicting any of that.

  • What this is, the tactics you're using, and you don't have aims,

  • in Extinction Rebellion, you have what you call demands,

  • and those demands you're trying to push through by bullying.

  • You've got the option to stand at the ballot box,

  • you had the cheek to talk about the suffragettes

  • and the Civil Rights movement in the United States.

  • Women didn't have the vote and neither did black people

  • in America, that's why they had to resort to that sort of action.

  • You have the ballot box.

  • Last time around in the European elections, under PR,

  • where Green Party isn't...

  • ..isn't affected by the first-past-the-post system,

  • got 11.8% of the vote.

  • That's a massive increase on the last general election at 1.6%.

  • So, it just shows, if you want to persuade people at the ballot box...

  • Julia, I do stand at the ballot box and I say to you...

  • But to bully people... Can I finish?

  • You are absolutely wrong about this.

  • To bully people through protest and disruption,

  • that's what it is, it's just bullying.

  • I'm sorry, it's not bullying

  • to point out to people that this actually is

  • an international crisis which has to be taken much more seriously.

  • It's no good for Grant to sit here and say,

  • "Look at all the brilliant things we're doing," when his government

  • is the one that's slashed investment in solar, that effectively banned

  • new wind farms, subsidised diesel, the dirtiest fuel of all...

  • Your party is opposed to fracking, one of the cleanest energy forms.

  • Your party is opposed to fracking.

  • Hang on. Slashing transport funding...

  • Fracking would bring down carbon emissions, you are opposed to it.

  • We're in favour of giving people a right to decide, which

  • strikes me as... No, you're opposed to fracking.

  • ..as frankly democratic, if you're

  • going to have fracking imposed on your area.

  • But let me say this to you as well -

  • this isn't just about the environment,

  • as absolutely critical as that is, this is about...

  • ..Mark Carney, the Governor of the Bank of England, saying very, very

  • clearly, that climate change and our failure to tackle it is the biggest

  • threat to the global financial system.

  • This is people's pensions, life savings, people's livelihoods.

  • And if you don't care about the future...

  • Of course I do,

  • but this it, whenever you have this debate...

  • If you won't accept the evidence about that, at least accept...

  • But I do. ..that there are people in this room and at home who stand

  • to lose an awful lot if you carry on pretending...

  • This is it, there we go. ..that this is not real. This is it.

  • APPLAUSE AND CHEERING

  • This is the nonsense scaremongering that we have,

  • and instead of having a sensible debate

  • about the science and the facts

  • and what the economic and political costs are

  • of different forms of action to tackle the issue,

  • we just shout, "You just don't care about

  • "the children if you don't agree with me."

  • And that's not a sensible, political, grown-up debate.

  • You're ignoring the science. I'm not ignoring the science at all!

  • Can I...? Final word, then I've got to move on.

  • Gentlemen over here said we should move faster on cars, and we'd

  • already said we'd end the sale of petrol and diesel cars

  • by 2040, before any of the Extinction Rebellion action.

  • Last week, I talked about

  • investigating bringing that forward to 2035.

  • The gentleman here talks about Northern Rail, and we're putting

  • a huge multibillion package into building a lot more Northern Rail.

  • We've heard this before. I don't think this should be a political

  • issue in as much as across Parliament,

  • we've agreed to vote for this, but Lisa, I have to pick you up on your

  • solar claim, because 99% of all the solar capacity in this country

  • has been built since this government was in power,

  • so your fact is simply wrong.

  • And Rupert, just to finish off, you want us to be fact-based, we are

  • following the facts of the Committee on Climate Change...

  • You're lying with statistics, that's what you're doing.

  • So, the Committee on Climate Change are now wrong about it?

  • The Committee on Climate Change are telling you that we're actually

  • way, way off the pace and that your efforts on adaptation

  • look like you're Dad's Army.

  • In other words, you're a laughing stock. So, when we have a country...

  • That's what we say about you.

  • When we have a country which, for example, last year,

  • and you won't let these facts out for some reason,

  • last year, low-carbon production of

  • energy made up over 53% of our entire

  • production as a nation - if I listened to you, I'd believe

  • we were getting nowhere, whereas in fact this economy is decarbonising.

  • As I said before, rather than disrupting people's lives here,

  • go and protest in the countries where the carbon needs to be

  • cut at a much faster rate...

  • Take responsibility. ..where they don't have any plan in place.

On tonight's panel -

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Should climate change activists be applauded or arrested? | Question Time - BBC

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    joey joey に公開 2021 年 10 月 18 日
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