Wednesday, 2 March 2011

It’ll Smell Better Than Their Stores…

Beth Vamhimsbergh, from Lush Cosmetics, in Sir Isaac’s Walk, Colchester, has agreed to be covered in “oil”, or in actual fact, a type of molasses treacle, and draped in the Canadian flag.

The protest aims to mark the launch of Lush’s campaign against Canadian tar sands oil, which the store says is destroying ancient forests.
How are people supposed to drive to your stores if we don't extract oil? How are you going to get your supplies, if the oil runs out?

9 comments:

Ringmer said...

If you've seen what's been done to Colchester in the last sixty years, you'll understand why they're in no position to give advice.

dr cromarty said...

Covered in molasses and draped in the Canadian flag.

Rule 34, methinks.

Gibby Haynes said...

Protesting against oil? Then we'd better extract and process all that nasty oil into fuel and plastics and whatnot, so she doesn't have to worry about it.

jd said...

Woman covered in treacle..? As you sure it's a cosmetics shop?

FrankC said...

I wonder what would happen if somebody accidentally dropped a bag of feathers upwind of the silly Beth.

Laban said...

We flew over the tar sands a couple of years ago. Extraction does make a hell of a mess of what would otherwise be a pristine wilderness.

JuliaM said...

"If you've seen what's been done to Colchester in the last sixty years, you'll understand why they're in no position to give advice."

All town High Streets look the same now, don't they?

"I wonder what would happen if somebody accidentally dropped a bag of feathers upwind of the silly Beth."

If it's anything like Southend High Street, the feral pigeons will already have provided a few!

"We flew over the tar sands a couple of years ago. Extraction does make a hell of a mess of what would otherwise be a pristine wilderness."

Very few energy methods are pretty. At least the tar sands is effective; can't say the same for wind turbines.

Anonymous said...

" has agreed to be covered in . . a type of molasses treacle"

Time to release the killer bees!

Angry Exile said...

Surely the important question should not be how much pristine wilderness is lost but how much pristine wilderness is left.