
Ribbon-Cutting the Flood Wall
The cartoon mocks performative climate leadership and corporate greenwashing: officials proudly celebrate an expensive engineered fix to a crisis while partnering with the very industries and land-use choices that worsen it. The joke is that they are congratulating themselves for solving a problem i
At center stage, a smiling mayor in a hard hat and oversized ceremonial scissors cuts a ribbon in front of a gleaming new flood wall labeled as a climate-resilience project. Flanking the mayor are corporate sponsors posing for cameras, their jackets and the wall itself plastered with oversized oil-company and airline logos like a sports sponsorship backdrop. Just over the wall or immediately behind the photo-op, the real scene is visible: excavators and workers are jackhammering and paving the last soggy strip of wetland, with a sign reading 'Airport Parking Expansion.' Water birds scatter, reeds are uprooted, and muddy water pools where the marsh used to be. The composition should make the hypocrisy readable in one glance: the public ceremony is polished and triumphant, while the background quietly shows they are destroying the natural flood protection that made the wall necessary.