Greta's Crazy Antics
Greta And Her Flotilla Fanboys (and Girls) Couldn't Care About Gaza: Here's How We Know
Global Sumud Flotilla Rejects Vatican’s Gaza Aid Plan, Sparks Outrage

In a high-stakes showdown on the high seas, the Global Sumud Flotilla, a convoy of roughly 50 vessels carrying 300 tons of humanitarian aid, has defiantly rejected a Vatican-backed proposal to deliver its cargo to Gaza via Cyprus, opting instead to challenge Israel’s 18-year naval blockade head-on.
Led by Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg and 500 "activists" from 46 countries, the flotilla, organized by the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, is steaming toward Gaza’s waters, undeterred by stern warnings from Israel.
The decision has ignited a firestorm, proving for once and for all that it's nothing more than a performative, provocative stunt.
The flotilla, named “Sumud” (Arabic for “steadfastness”), set sail from Barcelona on September 1, 2025, with stops in Tunisia and Greece, picking up high-profile passengers like former Barcelona Mayor Ada Colau, French MEP Rima Hassan, and four Italian parliamentarians among its 58 Italian citizens.
Recently, Italy’s government, backed by Cyprus and Israel, offered a compromise: Unload the aid in Cyprus, and the Vatican’s Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem would ensure delivery to Gaza. Italian PM Giorgia Meloni, President Sergio Mattarella, and Defense Minister Guido Crosetto pushed the plan, with Crosetto questioning the need to “endanger Italian citizens” for aid delivery. Meloni called the blockade breach “gratuitous, dangerous and irresponsible” at the UN, while Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani renewed the offer on September 28.
The Vatican, long critical of “collective punishment” in Gaza, stood ready to mediate, aligning with Pope Francis’s peace advocacy.
The flotilla’s response? A hard no. Organizers rejected both the Vatican plan and two Israeli offers to unload at Ashkelon for land transfer, arguing acceptance would legitimize the blockade. “We will continue heading to Gaza,” they declared, "They only make us more united.” Thunberg, brushing off publicity stunt accusations, insisted, “No one would risk their lives for a publicity stunt... When our governments fail to step up, the people will step up.”
On the war, she added, “I’m not scared of Israel. I’m scared of a world that has seemingly lost all sense of humanity.”
Italy and Spain deployed naval ships for protection, while the EU warned against force, citing navigation rights. Israel, unmoved, vows to intercept with elite forces, correctly calling the flotilla a “provocation serving Hamas.”
A civilian Israeli counter-flotilla is also forming to block them.Critics pounced, labeling the rejection proof of ulterior motives.
Social media posts on X branded it a “grift,” arguing the aid could’ve reached Gaza safely. Allegations swirl of Hamas ties to organizers like Zaher Birawi and Saif Abu Kashk. Supporters, backed by protests in 44 countries, see it as a stand for humanity, with Thunberg vowing to deliver “hope, solidarity.”
Really, though, what she and her cronies are delivering is sheer idiocy, coupled with breaching Israel's waters, which she hasn't managed to do in the past.
This could get ugly, and it it does, guess who's to blame?
That's right, Greta & co.
Why couldn't she just have stuck to fighting against global warming?
And, if it isn't stupid enough, listen to what David Adler about the Flotilla's real "aims":