
Ribbon-Cutting the Sea Wall
Climate adaptation is being celebrated as virtue while the same political and corporate class keeps indulging the emissions-heavy habits that make adaptation necessary. The joke is not that resilience projects are bad, but that leaders want applause for treating the symptom while ostentatiously wors
At a seaside ribbon-cutting, the mayor and smiling corporate sponsors pose with oversized ceremonial scissors in front of a massive new sea wall. Confetti flies, cameras flash, and a polished banner overhead reads 'BUILDING RESILIENCE FOR TOMORROW.' But directly behind the stage, a row of idling luxury SUVs, diesel excavators, and portable generators belches thick exhaust that drifts upward and curls back over the ceremony like a storm cloud. The sea wall should look impressive and protective, yet the background makes clear the event itself is helping fuel the very flooding threat it claims to solve. Small visual details—staff in green hard hats, branded sustainability logos, maybe a child holding a 'Future Safe!' sign while coughing lightly—sharpen the hypocrisy.
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Ribbon-Cutting the Sea Wall
The cartoon mocks greenwashed crisis management: the same industries profiting from climate damage rebrand themselves as civic saviors, while politicians celebrate symbolic infrastructure and sponsorship optics over the obvious reality that the emergency is already outpacing the ceremony.
by Karim Nader
Ribbon-Cutting the Sea Wall
Greenwashed real-estate hypocrisy: developers destroy the cheap, effective natural protection, then market and celebrate an expensive man-made substitute as proof of environmental responsibility.
by Karim Nader
Net Zero Traffic Jam
Climate leadership as staged virtue: elites publicly market sustainability while building a real-world system that rewards convenience, status, and emissions, turning “green” into branding rather than behavior.
by Karim Nader