Time
Person-of-the-Year Greta Thunberg is just the tip of the iceberg.
We
need an all-out WWII-style commitment to fight climate change. Some
U.S. politicians deny that publicly – until their constituents
experience floods, fires, or drought.
Young
people may break the logjam. It's their future, not ours.
Consider
the Sunrise Movement. Days after the Democrats took back the House
last year, 150 young people sat-in at Nancy Pelosi's office to urge
her to push forward with promised climate-change legislation. It
became a bigger news story when Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez stopped
by. Suddenly D.C. was full of young people wearing black T-shirts
with a rising sun.
As
rallies and protests attract increasing numbers, a group called
Momentum has started conducting training sessions based on careful
study of the civil rights
movement to make eager recruits more effective in generating greater
numbers. (Echoes of the '60's “Teach-ins?”)
Meanwhile,
College
Republicans nationwide are urging fellow Republicans to back a
conservative climate action plan, arguing that continued denial will
hurt both our Earth and the Party. The Young Conservative Climate
Campaign lobbies
Republicans to back a free-market “Carbon Dividends” plan to
reduce emissions. “This really is a generational issue,” said
Kiera O’Brien, a Harvard senior who founded YCCC and is its
President. “Especially given the rise of the Green New Deal, we
need to have our own alternative policies, because we can’t just
complain about the problem and not propose a solution.”
“Students
have a very strong incentive to see effective and actual legitimate
policy enacted,” said a former College Republicans chairman from
Utah. “This is something that’s going to directly impact us, so
we have a strong motive.” Internationally, the U.N. Framework on
Youth and Climate Change works intensely with many youth-led NGOs.
Aside
from Thunberg,
who started by skipping school and protesting outside Sweden's
Parliament on Fridays, there's Canadian Autumn Peltier (15) of the
Wikwemikong First Nation in Northern Ontario who's been advocating
for clean water since she was eight, and was nominated in 2017 for
the Children's International Peace Prize; and Leah Namugerwa (15)
who's spearheading the climate change movement in Uganda, urging the
government to take action on environmental issues. Floods that
killed 5,000 people in India in 2013 inspired Ridhima
Pandey (now 11) who sued the Indian government in 2017 over its
climate-change inaction. Fluctuating drought and heavy rainfall in
her small Mexican town inspired Xiye Bastida (17) to protect the
environment. Now in New York, Bastida's spoken at the U.N. and
helped organize a Global Climate Strike. (See my blog post for more
detail.)
Trump
and others gleefully mock these young people. I honor them. I don't
say they're right about everything, or have a detailed scientific
understanding of climate-change details. But we need them. Bees and
trees and seas need them, too. All hands on deck!
It's
far too late to “win” as we won WWII. Decades of dithering and
denial have made serious changes inevitable. But to mitigate the
damage, we need youth's energetic commitment, and these young folks'
abilities to persuade other youth and their loving families.
Is
it wishful thinking, or do I see today's youth developing the sense
of purpose we saw in young people in 1849, 1941, and 1968? Coming
of age when there are huge problems to solve, and helping convince
the nation – or the world – to solve them, can be transformative.
Let's
help these “kids” help us all.
-30-
[The above column appeared this morning, Sunday, 5 January 2020, in the Las Cruces Sun-News, as well as on the newspaper's website and KRWG's website. A spoken version is available at KRWG's website and will air during the week on both KRWG and KTAL, 101.5 FM (www.lccommunityradio.org) By the way, I'll be discussing KTAL, Las Cruces Community Radio, at the Roundtable at the Unitarian-Universalist Church on Solano Drive at 10:30 this morning (Sunday). It's an opportunity for folks to learn more about the station.][This particular column germinated in my mind recently when, the same week I was preparing for a radio discussion of climate change with State Climatologist Dave DuBois, a group of us happened to discuss generations. The others, younger than I, confirmed something I'd sort of figured, that although their youth had been fun and exciting and intense, they felt that their times in many ways paled next to the 1960's.
Thus it struck me that along with the scientifically-driven need to get serious about confronting climate-change, there might be a generational need for joining an important cause and pushing for change. I don't mean kids get into it as a fad. In the 1960's when youth tried to confront racism, inequality, the Viet Nam War, and other problems, members of the Movement varied widely from people who'd studied some of those problems seriously and thought long and hard about them and kids who saw that protests were where the action was. I'm sure it's the same here. A common thread is that in battling against racism and the War we too were not only addressed significant wrongs but dealt with wrongs that had a direct effect on many of us.]
[In the paragraph starting "Thunberg,
Time's
Person of the Year, started by skipping school and protesting outside
Sweden's Parliament on Fridays, . . ." most of the information regarding the individuals mentioned other than Thunberg came from https://yourstory.com/herstory/2019/10/5-young-climate-change-activists-autumn-peltier-ridhima-pandey. For an abundance of information on youth and climate change, see the U.N. website (https://www.un.org/youthenvoy/environment-climate-change/) or https://www.un.org/esa/socdev/documents/youth/fact-sheets/youth-climatechange.pdf. There's more there than I'd ever have time to read, but it was interesting to see the extent of the program (and resources for interested young people). ]
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