Natural Life Magazine

The Kids are the Grownups in the Climate Crisis Room

The Kids are the Grownups in the Room
(when it comes to the climate crisis)
By Sarah “Steve” Mosko

Children around the world, watching in disbelief as grownups fail to address the climate crisis, are launching their own climate movements.

In the United States, in contrast to the 2016 election – where exactly zero questions about global warming were posed during the general election debates – presidential candidates for the 2020 election are already being pressured to do something about the climate threat, and it’s our kids doing it.

Of the two largest youth climate movements in the U.S., one originated there and one abroad.

The Sunrise Movement is a student-led political organization which sprang up prior to the 2018 mid-term elections to advocate for transitioning to renewable energy. Half of the 20 candidates Sunrise supported for refusing to accept fossil fuel money won election.

Now, Sunrise is aggressively promoting the Green New Deal (GND), a congressional resolution outlining an ambitious economic stimulus package to drive down greenhouse gas emissions while creating green jobs and addressing income inequality. It’s nothing short of an economic and social revolution.

That children confronting an elected official for not supporting the GND can deliver a powerful political gut punch was driven home when California Senator Diane Feinstein’s condescending response to young activists went viral.

The other student-led movement was ignited in August, 2018 when Greta Thunberg, a Swedish teenager, walked out of school on a Friday to stand outside the Swedish parliament building in protest of her government’s inaction on climate change. Her personal activism has sparked a world-wide protest known as Fridays for Future (FFF), where students in over 2,200 cities across 128 countries join Greta in staging walkouts every Friday with the same message: The threat to their future posed by climate change is exponentially more important than whatever they’re missing in class.

FFF strikers are asking questions like, “Why study for a future, which may not be there?”

Greta is a climate hero to the younger generation, and many in the older generations are listening too. She’s recently given a TED talk, addressed the COP24 United Nations climate talks in Poland, and delivered a speech to the World Economic Forum where her six-minute statement to the grownups in power went viral: “….The main solution however is so simple even a small child can understand it. We have to stop the emissions of greenhouse gases….I don’t want you to be hopeful, I want you to panic….I want you to act as if the house is on fire, because it is.”

FFF mobilized a worldwide Strike For Climate on Friday, March 15, 2019, in which 100,000s of young people in nearly 2,000 cities in over 100 nations participated.

In a poignant letter addressed to global leaders, FFF activists stated their commitment to continue striking until those in power take responsibility for fixing the climate crisis.

On the day before the March 15 strike, Greta was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for her climate activism. Her determination is inspiring other children to express their outrage in creative ways. For example, nine-year-old Zayne Cowie wrote a children’s book for grownups entitled “Goodbye Earth,” which chastises adults for dumping on younger generations a crisis they did nothing to create.

Whether we grownups will move beyond the shame we should feel for making such a mess of things to take on the task at hand remains to be seen. A good start entails acknowledging that the party is over when it comes to the wanton burning of fossil fuels. It’s akin to the sober day after a frat-house party where there’s no getting around cleaning up the beer bottles, vomit, and crushed Cheetos if you want to have a decent place to live again.

The enthusiasm for the GND among more progressive members of the U.S. Congress, including several new young firebrands like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), offers hope that those in power might find the will to act before it’s too late.

Despite these hopeful signs, the intransigence in Congress still looms large and, to overcome, will require non-stop pressure from people of all ages.

We adults who’ve awakened to the climate crisis should feel humble before the youth activists who really have become the grownups in the room when it comes to taking responsible action. I’m reminded of the Biblical passage “out of the mouth of babes.”

Sarah "Steve" Mosko is a freelance writer focused on current environmental problems and solutions. Her other published articles on the environment can be read on www.BoogieGreen.com. She’s also a psychologist and sleep disorders specialist and lives in southern California.

 

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