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In this PJ Media article, Vijay Jayaraj argues that Amsterdam’s new ban on public advertisements for meat and fossil fuels is less about saving the planet than expanding elite control over ordinary choices.
- Amsterdam has reportedly become the world’s first capital city to outlaw public ads for both meat and fossil fuels, including promotions for gas-powered cars, airlines, cruises, distant vacations, and meat products.
- The ban, which began May 1, applies to public spaces such as billboards, tram stops, and metro stations.
- Jayaraj criticizes GreenLeft and the Party for the Animals, the political parties behind the measure, accusing them of treating basic fuels and nutrition as social evils.
- The article frames the ban as part of a broader global trend, noting similar ad restrictions in Haarlem, The Hague, France, and more than 50 cities worldwide.
- Jayaraj objects to comparing meat and fossil fuel advertising to tobacco advertising, arguing that energy and food are not destructive vices but basic components of modern life.
- The author disputes anti-meat climate claims, citing a CO₂ Coalition analysis that says eliminating all cattle worldwide would have only a tiny effect on projected warming.
- The piece argues that policies targeting agriculture and fossil fuels impose economic pain on working families while delivering little measurable environmental benefit.
- Jayaraj defends fossil fuels as essential to transportation, electricity, fertilizer, medicine, infrastructure, and economic development.
- The article concludes that Amsterdam’s policy is a performative gesture by climate-focused urban elites, offering moral posturing rather than practical environmental results.
Read the full story: https://pjmedia.com/vijay-jayaraj/2026/05/22/amsterdam-ad-ban-typifies-climate-alarmisms-farce-n4953157



