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Shifting gears: The climate protest movement in the age of coronavirus
By Paul Hockenos on Apr 10, 2020
For more than a year, just about every Friday at noon, Invaliden Park in downtown Berlin was transformed into a vivacious, noisy, swarming hubbub with teenage speakers, bands, and live dance acts as well as Germanys top climate scientists all sharing a makeshift stage and a microphone. Several thousand mostly school-age pupils waved banners and placards proclaiming There is no Planet B, School Strike for Climate, and Were on strike until you act! Their chants against fossil fuels and for swift, decisive action on global warming echoed against the granite facades of the federal ministries for economy and transportation, both adjacent to the square.
The happening was the weekly school strike in Berlin of Fridays for Future (FFF), the climate crisis movement that began in 2018 with the Swedish teenager Greta Thunberg skipping school once a week to protest her countrys half-hearted response to climate change. The movement then ricocheted across the globe, mobilizing school-age young people in wealthy countries as well as poor as never before. Last year, the campaign culminated in international demonstrations of millions in cities and towns from Cape Town, South Africa to Anchorage, Alaska, all with the same goal: to force their nations to cut greenhouse gas emissions and become carbon-neutral by 2050.
There was a brilliant logic to the school strikes that drew people in, explains Bill McKibben, author and cofounder of the climate action group 350.org. If [the adult world] cant be bothered to prepare a liveable world for me, why should I be bothered to sit in school and prepare for that future? That basic idea really hit home.
Now, the worsening coronavirus pandemic is forcing Thunberg and other leaders of FFF to further alter tactics. Fridays for Future in Germany and other countries has suspended all public demonstrations until now the movements mainspring and source of its high-profile media image, as well as donations. In a crisis we change our behavior, Thunberg tweeted earlier this month, and adapt to the new circumstances for the greater good of society. The Global Climate Strike, an international demonstration scheduled for April 24, has been called off. Thunberg proposed that FFF go digital by blanketing the internet and social media with the movements message.
Thunbergs tweets dont hint at it, but the virus and the public lockdowns have thrown the movement already struggling to build on its spectacular protests of 2019 into confusion. How can it pressure governments or businesses when gatherings are banned? How can the movement attract media coverage in the midst of a global pandemic? Will ordinary people faced with children at home or sick relatives or no jobs care about the climate when the COVID-19 crisis has turned their lives upside down? And will countries now sideline climate protection in order to put all of their energy and money into fighting the pandemic?
https://grist.org/climate/shifting-gears-the-climate-protest-movement-in-the-age-of-coronavirus/
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Shifting gears: The climate protest movement in the age of coronavirus (Original Post)
Nacht Owl
Apr 2020
OP
Interestingly, the shutdown is already showing how quickly we can begin to clean up the air.
lagomorph777
Apr 2020
#3
saidsimplesimon
(7,888 posts)1. Ms. Thunberg could use online media
talking about how the environment in major cites has improved, smog reduction for example. Perhaps this "time out" will result in more people appreciating and acting on her message.
2naSalit
(87,221 posts)2. That's what I'm hoping.
lagomorph777
(30,613 posts)3. Interestingly, the shutdown is already showing how quickly we can begin to clean up the air.
Granted, CO2 hangs around much longer than some of the most visible/smellable photochemical smog. But the tangible benefits of changing our ways can really give hope and vigor to the environmental movement in general, and atmospheric concerns in particular.