Inside Just Stop Oil training sessions where new recruits are taught how to deal with angry drivers 

By Abby Amoakuh

Published Nov 30, 2023 at 01:09 PM

Reading time: 2 minutes

52420

Are you comfortable causing havoc during the morning commute? Do you feel excited and tingly at the thought of disrupting parliament? Have you ever been to a play and thought “this might be a good time to jump on stage and use the opportunity to protest?” If your answer to all of these questions is yes, you might have exactly what it takes to be a Just Stop Oil recruit.

https://www.tiktok.com/@screenshothq/video/7307226719054826785

Just Stop Oil is a controversial, yet widely-known, British environmental activist group. The pressure group is notorious for utilising vandalism, traffic obstruction, and civil resistance to protest the licensing and production of new fossil fuels. And, apparently, they are constantly on the hunt for new members.

On Thursday 30 November 2023, the BBC reported that all potential recruits are required to attend a seven-hour training session, in which the instructors will ask questions similar to the ones listed above. Individuals who are interested can easily book themselves in through Just Stop Oil’s website.

The sessions are run across the UK in cities such as London, Bristol, Leeds, Norwich, and Oxford.

The actual training day is split into two halves, with the first one covering introductions, meditation, a discussion on the recruits’ hopes and fears, as well as explanations of their non-violent activism. After lunch, the group then moves on to practical techniques, playing out different scenarios, such as impersonating an angry driver and screaming and swearing at each other, while practising de-escalation techniques.

Throughout the session, it became clear that trainers as well as trainees understand the anger and frustration the public feels when the group destroys paintings, shuts down traffic, or interrupts live shows on air. However, they also seem to be united in the belief that their work is serving a purpose bigger than the disruption they are causing.

“We don’t have an ethical right to stop someone going to school,” said Heidi, who ran the session. But the government also shouldn’t have the right to issue new oil and gas licences when it’s going to cause billions of deaths,” the activist argued.

One potential recruit, Max, added: “People feel threatened by us, but they should be threatened by the government’s inaction about the climate crisis.”

Online, many netizens had mixed reactions after watching the unique insight the BBC was granted by getting to join one of their sessions.

Many likened the group to a cult and called out their different role-play scenarios as cringy and bizarre. Others expressed frustration at their constant disruption to civilian life and infrastructure. However, one user on X, formerly Twitter, stated: “Would like to take one,” so I guess Just Stop Oil would class the sneak peek as a success.

Keep On Reading

By Jack Ramage

Climate scientist warns cyclones could soon be the norm in Europe

By Charlie Sawyer

Transformers director Michael Bay officially confirmed to direct movie about viral Skibidi Toilet meme

By Abby Amoakuh

Celebrity Big Brother: JoJo Siwa’s partner Kath Ebbs turns off comments amid Chris Hughes romance rumours

By Charlie Sawyer

Another female influencer has been punched in the head in New York. Is it the same attacker?

By Abby Amoakuh

Sydney Sweeney calls wedding off and consciously uncouples from fiancé Jonathan Davino

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

James Toback hit with landmark $1.68 billion jury award after 40 women accused director of sexual abuse

By Charlie Sawyer

What is Mar-a-Lago face? Unpacking the beauty trend prompted by Donald Trump’s second term

By Charlie Sawyer

Michael Cera reveals why he turned down a role in the Harry Potter franchise

By Eliza Frost

People think Donald Trump is dead and they’re using the Pentagon Pizza Index to prove it

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Are Aimee Lou Wood and Walton Goggins feuding? Fans freak out after The White Lotus co-stars unfollow each other

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Kim Kardashian’s Paris $10 million heist: grandpa robbers tell all as trial begins

By Eliza Frost

Sabrina Carpenter says you need to get out more if you think Man’s Best Friend artwork is controversial 

By Charlie Sawyer

Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz Beckham hire a lawyer to battle misinformation amid growing family rift

By Charlie Sawyer

New study confirms Bacterial Vaginosis can be sexually transmitted, backing what women have long suspected

By Charlie Sawyer

Sabrina Carpenter accused of centering men on controversial album cover

By Abby Amoakuh

Right-wing Christian podcaster claims that airport body scanners can turn you gay

By Matilda Ferraris

From Ballerina Cappuccina to Trallalero Trallalà, we unpack the darker undertones of Italian brainrot

By Charlie Sawyer

Gen Zers are taking out travel insurance policies for their Labubus ahead of summer

By Eliza Frost

Couples who meet online are less happy in love, new research finds

By Charlie Sawyer

Johnny Depp plays the victim once more and anoints himself crash test dummy for #MeToo