Rome Mayor Says Climate Activists Cause ‘Environmental Damage’ After Turning Trevi Fountain Water Black Using Charcoal

Climate eco-anarchists in Rome turned the Trevi Fountain water black on Sunday after pouring diluted charcoal into the pool during a staged protest against public funding for fossil fuels they claim caused a recent flood that killed 14 people in northeastern Italy.

Protestors from the “Ultima Generazione” — translated as the “Last Generation” — climbed into the 18th-century fountain on Sunday morning with several banners that denounced paying for fossil fuels and mixed the carbonaceous material into the water as they shouted, “Our country is dying.”

Ecco il blitz di Ultima Generazione alla Fontana di Trevi #fontanaditrevi pic.twitter.com/GuF6vTo2nV

— Agenzia VISTA (@AgenziaVISTA) May 21, 2023

Protesters linked themselves to the “LET’S NOT PAY FOR FOSSIL” campaign, the group’s website states, which asks the Italian government to stop public subsidies to all fossil fuels immediately. The group believes such energy sources caused a recent deadly flood in Emilia Romagna and the Marches, devastating their territory, claiming 14 lives, forcing 10,000 people to abandon their homes, and leaving over 30,000 residents without electricity.

“1 out of 4 houses in Italy is vulnerable to floods,” the group tweeted. “How much longer do we have to wait for those in government to take concrete action?”

⚫️Carbone vegetale nell'acqua della Fontana di Trevi 🚰

1 casa su 4 in Italia è vulnerabile alle alluvioni.

Quanto dobbiamo ancora aspettare perché chi è al governo intervenga concretamente? pic.twitter.com/Au9fniQYrN

— Ultima Generazione (@UltimaGenerazi1) May 21, 2023

Within minutes of the climate activists’ demonstration, local authorities intervened and dragged them out of the fountain while hundreds of people visiting the landmark watched.

Located at the Piazza di Trevi square, the “Fontana di Trevi” is known the largest Baroque fountain in Rome and has become one of the most famous monuments around the world. The landmark was initially designed by Italian sculptor and architect Gian Lorenzo Bernini for Pope Clemens XII. However, according to Britannica, Italian architect Nicola Salvi redesigned the fountain and began some 30 years of construction on the site until it was completed by Giuseppe Pannini in 1762.

Rome Mayor Roberto Gualtieri applauded Rome Capital Police authorities in a Facebook post for stopping the activists and likely avoiding any permanent damage to the fountain’s porous marble.

Gualtieri said the “indifferent environmental damage” caused by activists has prompted the fountain to undergo a complex and costly cleaning operation that could result in waste of 300,000 liters of water to empty and refill the pool again, which functions to recycle water.

“I reiterate, that this is not the right way to conduct a battle for the environment and against climate change,” he said.

“Such gestures are completely wrong and damaging, because they risk damaging precious common goods such as our monuments, and force public administrations into very expensive and environmentally impactful restoration interventions,” Gualtieri added. “So they are completely counterproductive, and they also risk reducing the consent in public opinion regarding the right battle for the environment and climate.”

Gualtieri called on the climate protestors to stop such “absurd” attacks on the nation’s artistic heritage in a tweet, after a series of acts targeting works of art in Italy have recently occurred. The Daily Mail reported activists had thrown soup, cake, mashed potatoes, or washable paint at artistic and monumental heritage sites.

According to the news outlet, Last Generation began protesting in Italy last year before the general election, demanding lawmakers make climate change their priority.

Lawyer For NYC Woman Accused Of Racism Over Bike Dispute Asks Public For Help Tracking ‘Defamatory’ Statements

The attorney for Sarah Comrie — a white pregnant woman vilified on social media as a racist over a viral video showing a bike rental dispute between her and a black man with his friends in New York City — created a Twitter account to track defamatory remarks about his client.

Comrie, a physician’s assistant at Bellevue Hospital, encountered a man on May 12 who claimed he paid for a Citi Bike that she said she had rented first. Part of the confrontation went viral on social media with more than 40 million views, which has since resulted in Comrie keeping out of the public eye, receiving death threats, and NYC Health + Hospitals placing her on leave after some people branded her a “Karen.”

Attorney Justin Marino, who is representing Comrie, has since produced receipts he says prove his client paid for the bike, which contradicts the widely circulated claim that she “stole” it from the man. Marino, who has pledged to file defamation lawsuits, joined Twitter to help build such cases against those who he says unfairly smeared his client.

“I created this account so individuals can tag me as to defamatory statements/videos made against Ms. Comrie,” Marino said. “I’m looking for comments labeling Ms. Comrie a: 1) Karen; 2) racist; and/or 3) thief. Also, videos referencing a third party doing the foreging (sic) is also actionable.”

I created this account so individuals can tag me as to defamatory statements/videos made against Ms. Comrie. I'm looking for comments labeling Ms. Comrie a: 1) Karen; 2) racist; and/or 3) thief. Also, videos referencing a third party doing the foreging is also actionable.

— Justin Marino (@AttorneyJMarino) May 21, 2023

An account under the moniker “Leftism” replied to Marino’s tweet with a thread showing a person accused of initially doxxing Comrie and her husband’s social media accounts.

This is the person who originally doxxed her.https://t.co/CHhq6EtgBw

— Leftism (@LeftismForU) May 21, 2023

Lawyer Ben Crump, who has been involved in some of the most controversial racial cases in recent history, claimed in a now-deleted tweet that Comrie had tried to “steal” the bike.

“This is unacceptable! A white woman was caught on camera attempting to STEAL a Citi Bike from a young Black man in NYC,” Crump tweeted. “She grossly tried to weaponize her tears to paint this man as a threat. This is EXACTLY the type of behavior that has endangered so many Black men in the past!”

According to Marino, the NYC healthcare professional had finished a 12-hour shift when she paid for the bike and removed it from its docking station, only to have the group approach her with one holding onto the handlebars, insisting it was his. One man allegedly pushed the bike back into its docking station, prompting the woman to call for help, Marino told The New York Post, adding that one of the men covered the bike’s QR code so the woman could not pay for it again.

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“In blocking the QR code, this individual’s arm was touching my client’s pregnant stomach, a condition of which she had made them aware,” the attorney continued. “Throughout this time and for the remainder of the video, roughly five individuals were telling her to get off the bike and heckling her. The fact anyone would treat another person like this is tragic, especially a visibly pregnant woman.”

Marino said he has shown media outlets two timestamped Citi Bike receipts only minutes apart; the first, he said, represented the contested bike, while the second was for another bike the woman rented to get home, and it showed the 25-minute ride she took to get there.

Despite the limited context shown in the video, many on social media and some media outlets quickly ran with the framing that Comrie had tried to steal the bike from the black man.

“What’s at play is what social media did to this woman who’s literally a hero, and has done nothing but help people and within one minute effectively tries to ruin her life,” he told Fox News.