A blog to give a voice to our concern about the continued erosion of our democratic processes not only within the House of Commons and within our electoral system but also throughout our society. Here you will find articles about the current problems within our parliamentary democracy, about actions both good and bad by our elected representatives, about possible solutions, opinions and debate about the state of democracy in Canada, and about our roles/responsibilities as democratic citizens. We invite your thoughtful and polite comments upon our posts and ask those who wish to post longer articles or share ideas on this subject to submit them for inclusion as a guest post.
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Sunday, May 5, 2019

It bears repeating ..... again and again!

Is Anyone Listening?
My name is Greta Thunberg. I am 16 years old. I come from Sweden. And I speak on behalf of future generations.
I know many of you don’t want to listen to us – you say we are just children. But we’re only repeating the message of the united climate science.
Many of you appear concerned that we are wasting valuable lesson time, but I assure you we will go back to school the moment you start listening to science and give us a future. Is that really too much to ask?
In the year 2030 I will be 26 years old. My little sister Beata will be 23. Just like many of your own children or grandchildren. That is a great age, we have been told. When you have all of your life ahead of you. But I am not so sure it will be that great for us.
I was fortunate to be born in a time and place where everyone told us to dream big; I could become whatever I wanted to. I could live wherever I wanted to. People like me had everything we needed and more. Things our grandparents could not even dream of. We had everything we could ever wish for and yet now we may have nothing.
Now we probably don’t even have a future any more.
Because that future was sold so that a small number of people could make unimaginable amounts of money. It was stolen from us every time you said that the sky was the limit, and that you only live once.
You lied to us. You gave us false hope. You told us that the future was something to look forward to. And the saddest thing is that most children are not even aware of the fate that awaits us. We will not understand it until it’s too late. And yet we are the lucky ones. Those who will be affected the hardest are already suffering the consequences. But their voices are not heard.
Is my microphone on? Can you hear me?
Around the year 2030, 10 years 252 days and 10 hours away from now, we will be in a position where we set off an irreversible chain reaction beyond human control, that will most likely lead to the end of our civilisation as we know it. That is unless in that time, permanent and unprecedented changes in all aspects of society have taken place, including a reduction of CO2 emissions by at least 50%.
And please note that these calculations are depending on inventions that have not yet been invented at scale, inventions that are supposed to clear the atmosphere of astronomical amounts of carbon dioxide.
Furthermore, these calculations do not include unforeseen tipping points and feedback loops like the extremely powerful methane gas escaping from rapidly thawing arctic permafrost.
Nor do these scientific calculations include already locked-in warming hidden by toxic air pollution. Nor the aspect of equity – or climate justice – clearly stated throughout the Paris agreement, which is absolutely necessary to make it work on a global scale.
We must also bear in mind that these are just calculations. Estimations. That means that these “points of no return” may occur a bit sooner or later than 2030. No one can know for sure. We can, however, be certain that they will occur approximately in these timeframes, because these calculations are not opinions or wild guesses.
These projections are backed up by scientific facts, concluded by all nations through the IPCC. Nearly every single major national scientific body around the world unreservedly supports the work and findings of the IPCC.
Did you hear what I just said? Is my English OK? Is the microphone on? Because I’m beginning to wonder.
During the last six months I have travelled around Europe for hundreds of hours in trains, electric cars and buses, repeating these life-changing words over and over again. But no one seems to be talking about it, and nothing has changed. In fact, the emissions are still rising.
When I have been travelling around to speak in different countries, I am always offered help to write about the specific climate policies in specific countries. But that is not really necessary. Because the basic problem is the same everywhere. And the basic problem is that basically nothing is being done to halt – or even slow – climate and ecological breakdown, despite all the beautiful words and promises.
The UK is, however, very special. Not only for its mind-blowing historical carbon debt, but also for its current, very creative, carbon accounting.
Since 1990 the UK has achieved a 37% reduction of its territorial CO2 emissions, according to the Global Carbon Project. And that does sound very impressive. But these numbers do not include emissions from aviation, shipping and those associated with imports and exports. If these numbers are included the reduction is around 10% since 1990 – or an an average of 0.4% a year, according to Tyndall Manchester.

And the main reason for this reduction is not a consequence of climate policies, but rather a 2001 EU directive on air quality that essentially forced the UK to close down its very old and extremely dirty coal power plants and replace them with less dirty gas power stations. And switching from one disastrous energy source to a slightly less disastrous one will of course result in a lowering of emissions.
But perhaps the most dangerous misconception about the climate crisis is that we have to “lower” our emissions. Because that is far from enough. Our emissions have to stop if we are to stay below 1.5-2C of warming. The “lowering of emissions” is of course necessary but it is only the beginning of a fast process that must lead to a stop within a couple of decades, or less. And by “stop” I mean net zero – and then quickly on to negative figures. That rules out most of today’s politics.
The fact that we are speaking of “lowering” instead of “stopping” emissions is perhaps the greatest force behind the continuing business as usual. The UK’s active current support of new exploitation of fossil fuels – for example, the UK shale gas fracking industry, the expansion of its North Sea oil and gas fields, the expansion of airports as well as the planning permission for a brand new coal mine – is beyond absurd.
This ongoing irresponsible behaviour will no doubt be remembered in history as one of the greatest failures of humankind.
People always tell me and the other millions of school strikers that we should be proud of ourselves for what we have accomplished. But the only thing that we need to look at is the emission curve. And I’m sorry, but it’s still rising. That curve is the only thing we should look at.
Every time we make a decision we should ask ourselves; how will this decision affect that curve? We should no longer measure our wealth and success in the graph that shows economic growth, but in the curve that shows the emissions of greenhouse gases. We should no longer only ask: “Have we got enough money to go through with this?” but also: “Have we got enough of the carbon budget to spare to go through with this?” That should and must become the centre of our new currency.
Many people say that we don’t have any solutions to the climate crisis. And they are right. Because how could we? How do you “solve” the greatest crisis that humanity has ever faced? How do you “solve” a war? How do you “solve” going to the moon for the first time? How do you “solve” inventing new inventions?
The climate crisis is both the easiest and the hardest issue we have ever faced. The easiest because we know what we must do. We must stop the emissions of greenhouse gases. The hardest because our current economics are still totally dependent on burning fossil fuels, and thereby destroying ecosystems in order to create everlasting economic growth.
“So, exactly how do we solve that?” you ask us – the schoolchildren striking for the climate.
And we say: “No one knows for sure. But we have to stop burning fossil fuels and restore nature and many other things that we may not have quite figured out yet.”
Then you say: “That’s not an answer!”
So we say: “We have to start treating the crisis like a crisis – and act even if we don’t have all the solutions.”
“That’s still not an answer,” you say.
Then we start talking about circular economy and rewilding nature and the need for a just transition. Then you don’t understand what we are talking about.
We say that all those solutions needed are not known to anyone and therefore we must unite behind the science and find them together along the way. But you do not listen to that. Because those answers are for solving a crisis that most of you don’t even fully understand. Or don’t want to understand.
You don’t listen to the science because you are only interested in solutions that will enable you to carry on like before. Like now. And those answers don’t exist any more. Because you did not act in time.
Avoiding climate breakdown will require cathedral thinking. We must lay the foundation while we may not know exactly how to build the ceiling.
Sometimes we just simply have to find a way. The moment we decide to fulfil something, we can do anything. And I’m sure that the moment we start behaving as if we were in an emergency, we can avoid climate and ecological catastrophe. Humans are very adaptable: we can still fix this. But the opportunity to do so will not last for long. We must start today. We have no more excuses.
We children are not sacrificing our education and our childhood for you to tell us what you consider is politically possible in the society that you have created. We have not taken to the streets for you to take selfies with us, and tell us that you really admire what we do.
We children are doing this to wake the adults up. We children are doing this for you to put your differences aside and start acting as you would in a crisis. We children are doing this because we want our hopes and dreams back.
I hope my microphone was on. I hope you could all hear me.



Full text of the speech Greta Thunberg gave to MPs at the British Houses of Parliament

Support Democracy - Recommend this Post at Progressive Bloggers

9 comments:

The Mound of Sound said...


Years ago, Rural, I joined the Dark Mountain collective, a place for writers and poets and others concerned with this madness could gather, mainly online. I was taken by its manifesto, especially the line that it was for those unwilling to accept the lies society tells itself about what's happening.

Dark Mountain, despite Naomi Klein's criticisms, isn't about capitulating. It isn't about giving up the fight against ecological catastrophe. The fight, as it turns out, is easier when it's liberated from delusions and false expectations.

Dark Mountain helped me see that the fight isn't about miracles and salvation. It's a fight for the future in the hope that it might be a little less miserable, perhaps a little more tolerable than it certainly will be if we lose. For we can always make our grandkids future more hellish than it need be and, sadly, that is the course our leaders have us on.

It's when the future is seen through that light that you can clearly see straight through people like Kenney, Scheer, Moe, Pallister and Ford - and, yes, even Mr. Trudeau. Seen through that light, they're monsters.

The other shoe drops this week when another report comes out. From the UN. 1,800 pages of it. This one doesn't directly focus on global warming. It reveals the degraded world we have TODAY and what that portends for the coming decade or two. It reveals not what awaits our grandkids but our own fate and it's not pretty.

...cont'd

Rural said...

To paraphrase Greta, Are enough people listening, many of the younger generation seem to be but the 'elite' not so much!

The Mound of Sound said...

Part 2

Look at it this way. I still have years to go and yet, in my lifetime, the planet's human population has shot up from 2.5 billion at my birth to just shy of 8 billion today heading, we're told, to well over 9 billion by 2050.

I was well into my 30s when Reagan, Thatcher and Mulroney ushered in the age of neoliberalism. Since then, humanity has pillaged, despoiled and squeezed out all other life forms relentlessly. An inventory in 2014 found we had caused terrestrial life to plummet by half. The following year a similar study found the same loss of marine life. That's over the course of just 40 years. Those numbers are substantially worse today than they were just five years ago.

Since my birth, human longevity has increased markedly, about an extra decade. At the same time, our per capita consumption has burgeoned. In other words, there are three times more of us, living considerably longer and consuming resources as never in history.

We know we consume resources far in excess of Earth's ability to replenish them. Right now it's by a factor somewhat worse than 1.7. To do that we're "eating our seed corn" and depleting our Earth's carrying capacity. We're degrading and exhausting our arable land, draining our aquifers, contaminating our dwindling surface water supplies by agricultural and industrial runoff, fishing "down the food chain," deforesting our rapidly disappearing wilderness and more. The worst and ultimately deadliest part is that we're DEPENDENT on these practices. Imagine if we had to retreat to the point where humankind, in balance with the non-human species without which we're doomed, sought to live within the ecological carrying capacity of our one and only biosphere, Spaceship Earth. We would have to at least halve our population and implement a similar reduction in resource consumption. Any takers?

The UN report is expected tomorrow. We shall see. Our governments haven't rallied to the urgent call to cut emissions by half by 2030. I can't see them taking the radical action needed to create a sustainable planetary ecology, our biosphere. Can you?

Lorne said...

Hers is a powerful voice, Rural. But are the people who need really to hear her listening to Greta?

Rural said...

We can but hope they start to do so before it is too late Lorne.

Owen Gray said...

One of the problems of being young is that your elders think you're foolish, Rural. But there is truth to the adage that, "There's no fool like an old fool."

the salamander said...

.. find and watch 'The Man Who Planted Trees'.. think it over..
Also think of the aged man who was asked bluntly.. why he bothered..
after all.. he would not be around to see them grow up

He politiely asked that person to step away, step back
'You're in the way'.. and he also said 'there's not a minute to waste then eh' ..
'since growing a tree takes such a long time...'

.. the salamanders have spoken ..

Rural said...

Yep Owen, there are time when I wonder about myself..........

Rural said...

I look after my 15 acres of trees with great care Sal, my small contribution.