Think we should be at school? Today’s climate strike is the biggest lesson of all
Think we
should be at school? Today’s climate strike is the biggest lesson of all
By: Greta
Thunberg and Others
Taken from:
The Guardian
It started
in front of the Swedish parliament, on 20 August – a regular school day. Greta
Thunberg sat with her painted sign and some homemade flyers. This was the first
school climate strike. Fridays wouldn’t be regular schooldays any longer. The
rest of us, and many more alongside us, picked it up in Australia, Germany,
Belgium, Switzerland, New Zealand, Uganda. Today the climate strike will take
place all around the world.
This
movement had to happen, we didn’t have a choice. We knew there was a climate
crisis. Not just because forests in Sweden or in the US had been on fire;
because of alternating floods and drought in Germany and Australia; because of
the collapse of alpine faces due to melting permafrost and other climate
changes. We knew, because everything we read and watched screamed out to us
that something was very wrong.
That first
day of refusing to go to school was spent alone, but since then a movement of
climate strikers has swept the globe. Today young people in more than 100
countries will walk out of class to demand action on the greatest threat
humankind has ever faced.
These
strikes are happening today – from Washington DC to Moscow, Tromsø to
Invercargill, Beirut to Jerusalem, and Shanghai to Mumbai – because politicians
have failed us. We’ve seen years of negotiations, pathetic deals on climate
change, fossil fuel companies being given free rein to carve open our lands,
drill beneath our soils and burn away our futures for their profit. We’ve seen
fracking, deep sea drilling and coalmining continue. Politicians have known the
truth about climate change and they’ve willingly handed over our future to
profiteers whose search for quick cash threatens our very existence.
This
movement had to happen, we didn’t have a choice. Last year’s UN
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s special report on global warming
could not have been clearer about the extreme dangers of going beyond 1.5C of
global warming. To have any chance of avoiding that extreme danger emissions
must drop rapidly – so that by the time we will be in our mid- and late-20s we
are living in a transformed world.
The
students who are striking in cities, towns and villages around the world are
uniting behind the science. We are only asking that our leaders to do the same.
If those in
power today don’t act, it will be our generation who will live through their
failure. Those who are under 20 now could be around to see 2080, and face the
prospect of a world that has warmed by up to 4C. The effects of such warming
would be utterly devastating. Rivers would flood, storms would wreak havoc on
coastal communities and coral reefs would be eliminated. Melting polar ice caps
would lead to dramatically higher sea levels, flooding coastal areas. Places on
Earth will become uninhabitable.
Scientists
have also shown us that burning fossil fuels is “the world’s most significant
threat to children’s health”. Nine out of every 10 children around the world
are breathing dangerous air. Our lives are being compromised before we are
born. Toxic particles from exhaust fumes pass through the lungs of pregnant
women and accumulate in the placenta. The risk of premature birth, low birth
weight and cognitive dysfunction this causes is a public health catastrophe.
Pollution from diesel vehicles is stunting the growth of our lungs, leaving us
damaged for life. Toxic air from burning fossil fuels is choking not only our
lungs but our hopes and dreams.
And the
worst effects of climate change are disproportionately felt by our most
vulnerable communities. This is not just about cutting down emissions, but
about equity – the system we have right now is failing us, working only for the
rich few. The luxury so few of us enjoy in the global north is based on the
suffering of people in the global south.
We have
watched as politicians fumble, playing a political game rather than facing the
facts that the solutions we need cannot be found within the current system.
They don’t want to face the facts – we need to change the system if we are to
try to act on the climate crisis.
This
movement had to happen, we didn’t have a choice. The vast majority of climate
strikers taking action today aren’t allowed to vote. Imagine for a second what
that feels like. Despite watching the climate crisis unfold, despite knowing
the facts, we aren’t allowed to have a say in who makes the decisions about
climate change. And then ask yourself this: wouldn’t you go on strike too, if
you thought doing so could help protect your own future?
So today we
walk out of school, we quit our college lessons, and we take to the streets to
say enough is enough. Some adults say we shouldn’t be walking out of classes –
that we should be “getting an education”. We think organising against an
existential threat – and figuring out how to make our voices heard – is
teaching us some important lessons.
Other
adults keep saying: “We owe it to the young people to give them hope.” But we
don’t want your hope. We don’t want you to be hopeful. We want you to panic and
we want you to take action. We want you to join us.
We’ve relied
on adults to make the right decisions to ensure that there is a future for the
next generation – surely we don’t have all the answers. But what we do know is
that we need to keep fossil fuels in the ground, phase out subsidies for dirty
energy production, seriously invest in renewables and start asking difficult
questions about how we structure our economies and who is set to win and who is
set to lose.
And we are
no longer alone. Tens of thousands of scientists from around the world have
released statements in support of the strikes by children. The scientists have
been very clear about what we need to do to tackle climate change. We are
uniting behind the scientists. We are only asking that our leaders do the same.
It is so
important that this happens now. The kind of changes that need to happen mean
everyone recognising that this is a crisis and committing to radical transformations.
We strongly believe that we can fight off the most damaging effects of climate
change – but we have to act now.
There is no
grey area when it comes to survival. There’s no less bad option. That’s why
young people are striking in every corner of the globe, and it’s why we are
asking that older people join us on the streets too. When our house is burning
we cannot just leave it to the children to pour water on the flames – we need
the grownups to take responsibility for sparking the blaze in the first place.
So for once, we’re asking grownups to follow our lead: we can’t wait any
longer.
This
movement had to happen. And now, you adults have a choice.
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