
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.
A single-panel cartoon outside a sleek international climate summit venue. A massive banner over the entrance proclaims: “ARRIVE SUSTAINABLY.” Directly below, the entire boulevard is jammed solid with identical glossy black SUVs, engines visibly idling in a haze, each with tiny delegate flags in the windows. A few chauffeurs look bored while delegates check phones or wave VIP badges. Along the curb, the bright green bike lane is completely unusable—blocked by summit security barricades, concrete planters, and ornamental trees tagged “Green Leadership.” One stranded cyclist stands at the blockage holding a helmet, staring at the sign in disbelief. Security ushers pedestrians toward the SUV queue as if this is normal. The composition should make the hypocrisy instantly readable: the event preaching climate virtue has physically designed the street so only the most carbon-heavy option works.
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