‘Don’t teach us from your beautiful villas’: Social media slams celebs urging AGAINST return to normality after Covid-19

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‘Don’t teach us from your beautiful villas’: Social media slams celebs urging AGAINST return to normality after Covid-19

A group of renowned celebrities, among them showbiz stars and Nobel Prize recipients, have insisted that, while the Covid-19 crisis is “tragic,” other perils – including “ecological collapse” – are more disastrous for humankind.

Juliette Binoche, one of France’s best-loved film stars, teamed up with astrophysicist Aurelien Barrau to issue yet another call to the world. Published by Le Monde newspaper, it features over 200 signatories, including actors Monica Bellucci, Cate Blanchett and Robert De Niro, singers Ricky Martin and Madonna, and over a dozen Nobel Prize laureates in physics and chemistry.

Calling the coronavirus epidemic – which has so far claimed over 257,000 lives globally – “a tragedy,” they argued that other challenges are also looming over humankind.

The open letter starts with warnings about “the ongoing ecological catastrophe” which threatens “the massive extinction of life on Earth.” Unlike the Covid-19 crisis, they say, a global environmental collapse will have “immeasurable consequences.”

All these perils are man-made, the signatories insist, and most of them are still preventable – provided world leaders make “a profound overhaul of our goals, values, and economies.”

“We believe it is unthinkable to ‘go back to normal’,” the open letter urges, before passionately calling for “the radical transformation we need – at all levels.”

Social media users, however, weren’t impressed by the call. One accused the signatories of being detached from reality.

It’s easy to preach environmental friendliness “when you are rich and famous,” another noted, but when you are “a simple worker whose job depends on a polluting industry, it’s hard to consider changing everything, at the risk of losing everything.”

There were also a host of skeptical French-speaking netizens who demanded “concrete proposals” from “millionaires who exploded the carbon footprint that no individual will ever reach.” Stopping “making polluting films” and not offering “lessons on sobriety” was named among the options.

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