Music NewsHypocrisy

Watch: Eco-Hypocrite Sting Lecture on Climate Change

Sting isn’t afraid of tackling big issues in his music.

Child slavery (“Children’s Crusade”). Nuclear war (“Russians”). Englishmen in New York (“Englishman in New York”).

Now, he’s training his pipes on climate change.

Sting - One Fine Day (Official Video)

The official video for “One Fine Day,” from the rocker’s new album “57TH & 9TH [Deluxe Edition],” features the following lyrics:

Apologists say
The weather’s just a cycle we can’t change
Scientists say
We’ve pushed those cycles way beyond
Dear leaders, please do something quick
Time is up, the planet’s sick
But hey, we’ll all be grateful
One fine day?
Today the North West Passage just got found
Three penguins and a bear got drowned
The ice they lived on disappeared
Seems things are worse than some had feared

It’s the same ol’ song from the rich and famous or, as some would say, “our betters.”

Only Sting’s eco-hypocrisy may be on par with Leonardo DiCaprio and James Cameron. And that’s saying something.

Let’s look at Sting’s largesse. British papers have reported on his lavish lifestyle, which hardly meshes with his environmental message. Imagine the energy required to pay Sting’s bills.

Here’s The Daily Mail  dishing on Sting’s lifestyle circa 2008:

He keeps no fewer than four homes in Britain with his wife, Trudie Styler, including the 800 acre Lake House estate in Wiltshire.

The home has 14 bedrooms and 8 baths.

He also has a beach house in Malibu, an estate in Tuscany, a million pound home in New York and a love for 4×4 cars.

Last year, his former cook Jane Martin told an employment tribunal how “opulent extravagance reigned” at the home, and there was “no regard to cost, expense or wastage” of food or drink.

That doesn’t take into account his rock lifestyle. That same year, Sting’s band The Police topped the list of groups with the largest carbon footprint.

He once scored a highly profitable licensing fee for Jaguar to promote its gas-guzzling line with his hit song “Desert Rose.”

Earlier in his career he copped to jetting back home after each of his concerts. His Rainforest Foundation has earned terrible ratings in the past for the amount of money it actually pours into its various causes.

Times change, though. Three years after those Daily Mail revelations he told reporters none of that really matters until deforestation issues are put under control.

Now, he’s singing about our dying earth and what we need to do to save it. For all his eco-lectures and work on behalf of Mother Earth, he could start by practicing what he preaches. If only a little.

Photo credit: rtppt via Foter.com / CC BY-NC-SA

4 Comments

  1. At his point, what difference can it possibly make. The science is definitely settled.

    “Barack Obama has only four years to save the world. That is the stark assessment of Nasa scientist and leading climate expert Jim Hansen who last week warned only urgent action by the new president could halt the devastating climate change that now threatens Earth. Crucially, that action will have to be taken within Obama’s first administration, he added.”

    —“President ‘has four years to save Earth’,” the London Guardian, January 17, 2009.

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