If so, then the melting of the
polar ice caps just moved a step closer, following calls by Trudie Styler,
a leading celebrity
ecological hypocrite - call them hippy-crites for short - for the general
public to eat more locally grown vegetables.
Campaigning against food miles
might seem an unlikely cause for Styler, given that a tribunal last year heard
how she
ordered her personal chef to travel over 100 miles to make a bowl of pasta
for her youngest child and has sold olive oil
and honey from her Tuscan estate, Il Palagio, 1,000 or so miles away, in
Harrods in London.
So it was hardly surprising that
an alert journalist present at the lecture, which was being staged as part
of the Earls
Court Real Food Festival, had the wit to question the environmental record
of Styler and her husband Sting.
The couple's carbon footprint,
the impertinent ink-stained wretch pointed out, has been estimated at 30 times
greater
than the average Briton's. How did Styler and Sting - who have seven homes
- square that with their environmental crusading?
Styler conceded that as Sting "has a 750-person crew to bring around the world, it is a difficult challenge".
Her rare moment of ecological candour was shortly replaced by the more familiar self-congratulation and justification, however.
"I would like to think that we
both work pretty hard for the rights of indigenous people and for the rights
of conservation of the
Amazon rainforest, but we do need to get around," she said.
Of course, Sting and Trudie's
"do as I say not as I do" approach to the dilemma of environmental pollution
is by no means
unusual among the carbon-guzzling lifestyle of the celebrity elite.
Here's a roll call of some other
startlingly hippy-critical celebrities: