That hag again.

Go green and stand by it.

They should call him a hypocrite, he told the FAZ, because he campaigns for climate protection in word and deed on weekdays, but turns in circles in his Formula 1 energy slingshot on Sundays.

The fact that not everything in life fits together, that passion sometimes fights against reason, can not only be seen in the CV of the four-time world champion.

This is more of an everyday experience with an all-round view in times of change.

Formula 1 society will have to get used to Sebastian Vettel in "green" embassy clothing.

In Miami he wore a T-shirt warning that Florida would submerge in view of the melting poles, in Baku he campaigned for "Friday for Future" on every Lord's Day, in Canada the Hessian demanded an end to tar sand mining for oil production in order to cut down jungle to stop.

A foreseeable exit can be seen on the path of the 33-year-old German.

Formula 1 management would like it.

The head office stinks that a champion constantly shows her which development she needs to be faster at.

It could be good for the air if it stayed.